Summer might mean beach days and ice cream, but rising temperatures are turning up the heat on a silent killer: heatstroke. From Asia to the Americas, scorching weather is putting lives at risk—and experts say it’s only getting worse. 🔥
Take 62-year-old Wang from Hubei Province. After collapsing while working outdoors in Xiangyang City, his body temperature hit a life-threatening 42°C (107.6°F). Doctors battled to save him with rapid cooling treatments, but he spent five days unconscious in the ICU. 😓
Meanwhile, in the Philippines, nearly 200 students fainted during a parade under brutal July heat. These stories aren’t isolated. As climate change fuels longer, fiercer heatwaves, the World Health Organization (WHO) and World Meteorological Organization (WMO) are sounding the alarm: workers and communities need better protection, now.
🌐 Why it matters: Heatstroke isn’t just feeling dizzy—it’s a medical emergency. Symptoms like confusion, seizures, and organ failure can turn deadly fast. Outdoor laborers, athletes, and even students are especially vulnerable.
💡 Stay safe: Hydrate, avoid peak sun hours, and recognize early signs (headaches, nausea). As one doctor put it: "Your body isn’t built to fight 42 degrees alone."
With record-breaking temps becoming the new normal, this summer’s lesson is clear: Beat the heat—or risk getting burned. 🌞💦
Reference(s):
cgtn.com