Portugal reports more than 1,000 heat-related deaths
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[July 20, 2022]
LISBON (Reuters) - Portugal has
reported more than 1,000 deaths due to the current heat wave, with the
health chief warning on Tuesday that the country must gear up to cope
with the effects of climate change as temperatures continue to rise.
"Portugal ... is among one of the areas of the globe that could be
(more) affected by extreme heat," Graça Freitas, head of health
authority DGS, told Reuters. "We have to be more and more prepared for
periods of high temperatures."
Temperatures across drought-stricken Portugal surpassed 40 degrees
Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) last week. Although they have dropped in the
last few days, Freitas said they remained above normal levels for this
time of the year.
DGS previously reported 238 excess deaths due to the heat wave from July
7 to 13, but Freitas said the number of fatalities has now increased to
1,063 for the period up to July 18.
High temperatures, the ongoing drought and poor forest management have
been blamed for several wildfires sweeping across Portugal. Firefighters
also are combating blazes in other southern European nations, including
in Spain.
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View of Prazeres cemetery in Lisbon, Portugal, July 19, 2022.
REUTERS/Pedro Nunes
Carlos Antunes, a researcher at
Lisbon University's faculty of sciences, said in an interview that
the data showed those most likely to die due to heat waves were
elderly people.
He said the number of deaths in the future will
depend, among other things, on the preventive measures people adopt
to protect themselves, how care homes tend to their residents and
the adaptation of infrastructures.
"With climate change, it is expected that this increase in mortality
will intensify and therefore we have to take measures at the public
health level to minimise the impact," Antunes said.
(Reporting by Catarina Demony, Miguel Pereira and Pedro Nunes;
Editing by Paul Simao)
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