Heatwave-related deaths under-reported in Telangana
A substantial proportion of patients who may have had symptoms as a result of a heat wave during the summer prefer private healthcare facilities such as a nursing home, clinic, or private hospital. Currently, there is no system for sharing data on heat wave cases between private healthcare facilities and the public health department. The ongoing problem of no data sharing might be a key contributor to under-reporting.
"Elderly people with a history of diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, or renal failure are more likely to be victims of heat waves, even if they stay inside. Similarly, newborns and the ill find it difficult to regulate their internal temperature. Senior government physicians here stated that such deaths are not classified as heat strokes and are not registered or tallied as heat deaths.
"I feel that in metropolitan areas, there was a lot of knowledge about the heat wave, and people avoided going out. However, this was not the case in districts where similar incidents went unreported," claimed a top public health officer in Hyderabad.
• When the body temperature at the moment of collapse was more than 105 degrees Fahrenheit (40.6 degrees Celsius), the cause of death should be heat stroke or hyperthermia.
• A significant majority of these deaths occur in patients with a preexisting illness.
• Such fatalities can be classified as heat-related, with illness being a substantial contributing factor, or vice versa.