"Sometimes, when you've been in the heat for a while you get
dizzy," Larreta, 25, said on a break from shoveling cement in a
parking lot under the blazing sun.
"I have seen colleagues who, in the afternoon, when they’re just
about to check out from work, suddenly get dizzy or fall down,
faint," Larreta added.
A deadly heat wave spiked temperatures across Mexico in June,
but while recent weeks have brought relief to more southern
regions, the country's heat-accustomed northern states have
continued to bake in abnormally high temperatures.
Heat waves have historically hit Mexico in April and May,
according to data from the Autonomous National University of
Mexico (UNAM). This year, experts said the heat wave was
worsened by drought.
The local government, along with religious groups, took to the
streets to offer homeless people shelter, water, and rehydration
salt packets to avoid heat strokes.
Aaron Gomez, who manages a shelter set up by the government to
offer refuge from the heat, said they had assisted over 1,500
mostly homeless people with hydration and other services,
including the option to stay in a shaded area with fans and
cots.
Martina Sarabia, a local volunteer, mixed electrolyte powder in
a pitcher of water to have ready for the city's homeless
population.
"If we see someone who needs it, we provide water with
rehydration salts ... so that they can get their medicine,
because it really is a medicine," said Sarabia.
(Reporting by Victor Medina; Writing by Brendan O'Boyle; Editing
by Kim Coghill)
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