
Exercising or playing sports in extreme heat can be extremely dangerous — here's how to take precautions
Extreme heat makes it especially hard for your body to cool down, so you need to be extra careful if you exercise or play sports when it's baking outside.
Your brain tries to keep your body within a degree or two of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius), and it does so in part by triggering sweat. When sweat dries, it carries away heat from your body's surface.
When sweat can't do its job — because your body is generating a lot of heat or it's too hot and humid to cool down — you are at risk of becoming dehydrated or even getting a heat-related illness such as heat exhaustion or heat stroke.
Bharat Venkat, an associate professor at UCLA and the director of the UCLA Heat Lab, says heat can impact the entire body. 'We'll often talk about heat cramps. We'll talk about heat exhaustion. We will talk about heat stroke,' he said. 'But it's actually much wider than that. Heat can really impact every system in our body, our hearts, our lungs.'
The higher the temperature, the harder it is for the body to stay cool, but humidity plays a big role too. High humidity makes it feel hotter than the temperature because it makes sweating less effective. There's so much water in the air already that it can't take up much more — including the water in your sweat.
The heat index, which factors in humidity and is included on many weather forecasts, provides a sense of how hot it really feels — and what's dangerous for prolonged exposure or strenuous activity.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says people should start exercising 'caution' when the heat index reaches 80 to 90 degrees and 'extreme caution' from 90 to 103 degrees. It labels everything over 103 'danger' or 'extreme danger.'
NOAA has a chart that shows how the heat index is affected by humidity. For example, a day that is 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) can hit the 'danger' level with 70% humidity.
If you want to exercise in the heat, here are some tips to say safe, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
— Time your exercise and outdoor activities for the coolest parts of the day.
— Try to exercise in the shade as much as possible.
— Take frequent breaks.
— Drink lots of fluids, and limit drinks that are high in sugar, caffeine and alcohol. Don't wait until you are thirsty to drink more.
— Exercise with someone so you can check on each other, or pair up with a teammate.
If you start to feel any of these symptoms, stop exercising, get to a cool place and seek medical care:
— Muscle cramping or muscle weakness
— Shortness of breath
— Dizziness
— Headaches
— Nausea
'Athletes and other folks who regularly engage in strenuous activity often think that they can handle it,' UCLA's Venkat said. 'But a lot of studies have shown that we're really bad at gauging how hot it is.'
A common heat-related illness is heat exhaustion, which can be marked by rapid heartbeat, fast breathing, headache, nausea and muscle weakness or cramping.
It can develop into the more serious heat stroke, when your body can no longer control its temperature. Symptoms include confusion or slurred speech, seizures or even loss of consciousness.
Heat also increases your risk for a rare condition called rhabdomyolysis, which causes the rapid breakdown of muscles. If you think you or a fellow athlete is in danger, call 911, give them fluids — preferably water — and try to cool their bodies with cold water or cold compresses.
And even if you think you can deal with the heat, Venkat said, 'It's better to kind of take a step back and take it easy.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
ICE agents entered UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center. It wasn't a raid, officials say
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents entered UCLA Ronald Reagan Medical Center in Westwood on Tuesday afternoon to seek emergency care for a detainee, drawing a crowd of protesters concerned about the agents' presence, university officials said. Two ICE officers brought a detainee into the emergency room for treatment, Steve Lurie, UCLA associate vice chancellor for campus and community safety, told The Times. The patient's medical evaluation did not require them to be admitted to the hospital, and they were later discharged into ICE custody. No information was available about the patient's health. "Despite reports on social media, there is no ICE operation happening at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center," said UCLA Health in a statement. Hospital staff called UCLA police officers to the building to verify the federal agents' identity. Officers checked the agents' credentials and confirmed they were with ICE, Lurie said. Read more: In Southern California, many are skipping healthcare out of fear of ICE operations A crowd of around 50 people gathered outside the hospital Tuesday afternoon in response to reports of ICE's presence, underscoring the heightened level of community tension around ongoing immigration actions in the Los Angeles area. Healthcare facilities that serve low-income patients have reported a recent spike in no-shows as residents lacking documentation opt to skip medical visits amid rumors of raids at hospitals and clinics. On Wednesday, L.A. Mayor Karen Bass plans to speak at an 11 a.m. community briefing hosted by St. John's Community Health in response to fears that medical facilities are being targeted by immigration agents. "As a former healthcare professional, Mayor Bass is deeply concerned by the ripple effects these raids are having when families are not able to safely access essential healthcare services," said a spokesperson for the mayor in a statement. Trained observers from the L.A. Rapid Response Network witnessed a woman being escorted out of an underground parking lot at the medical center by two federal agents and loaded into a van at 3:37 p.m., said Jorge-Mario Cabrera, director of communications for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights L.A. This network, led by CHIRLA, trains volunteers, attorneys and educators to respond to and verify reports of ICE activity in Greater Los Angeles. "At some level, there's a little bit of relief that at least ICE brought the patient in rather than just hauling them away without any care," said Randall Kuhn, UCLA professor of public health, who came to the facility in response to reports of agents. "ICE doesn't necessarily have a reputation for being very focused on detainee health." However, he added, he is worried about the risk of the patient experiencing another medical emergency if their health issue was triggered by the stress of being detained by ICE. He also raised questions about whether the patient received linguistically and culturally appropriate care. "Was the person assessed for social determinants of health?" said Kuhn. "Were they [doctors] able to address the possibility that the person would be at risk if they were released, given that ICE agents were present?" Lurie said that the process for discharging the detainee was the same that is used when any law enforcement agency brings a person in custody into a hospital for treatment. If Tuesday's incident at the medical center had actually been an enforcement action, UCLA Police could not have intervened. The agency does not have the authority to block federal immigration agents from entering areas on campus or medical facilities that are open to the general public. If immigration enforcement officers seek to enter a limited-access healthcare area — such as patient rooms or closed wards — UCLA advises staff to contact their administrator and the medical center's legal representative to review any warrants or subpoenas to determine whether entry is allowed. Staff are told to ask the agents for their name, identification number and agency affiliation and to tell them that they are not obstructing their process but need to contact administrators for assistance. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

9 hours ago
Exercising or playing sports in extreme heat can be extremely dangerous
Extreme heat makes it especially hard for your body to cool down, so you need to be extra careful if you exercise or play sports when it's baking outside. Your brain tries to keep your body within a degree or two of 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit (37 degrees Celsius), and it does so in part by triggering sweat. When sweat dries, it carries away heat from your body's surface. When sweat can't do its job — because your body is generating a lot of heat or it's too hot and humid to cool down — you are at risk of becoming dehydrated or even getting a heat-related illness such as heat exhaustion or heat stroke. The higher the temperature, the harder it is for the body to stay cool, but humidity plays a big role too. High humidity makes it feel hotter than the temperature because it makes sweating less effective. There's so much water in the air already that it can't take up much more — including the water in your sweat. The heat index, which factors in humidity and is included on many weather forecasts, provides a sense of how hot it really feels — and what's dangerous for prolonged exposure or strenuous activity. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration says people should start exercising 'caution' when the heat index reaches 80 to 90 degrees and 'extreme caution' from 90 to 103 degrees. It labels everything over 103 'danger' or 'extreme danger." NOAA has a chart that shows how the heat index is affected by humidity. For example, a day that is 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) can hit the 'danger' level with 70% humidity. If you want to exercise in the heat, here are some tips to say safe, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. — Time your exercise and outdoor activities for the coolest parts of the day. — Try to exercise in the shade as much as possible. — Take frequent breaks. — Drink lots of fluids, and limit drinks that are high in sugar, caffeine and alcohol. Don't wait until your are thirsty to drink more. — Exercise with someone so you can check on each other, or pair up with a teammate. If you start to feel any of these symptoms, stop exercising, get to a cool place and seek medical care: — Muscle cramping or muscle weakness — Shortness of breath — Dizziness — Headaches — Nausea A common heat-related illness is heat exhaustion, which can be marked by rapid heartbeat, fast breathing, headache, nausea and muscle weakness or cramping. It can develop into the more serious heat stroke, when your body can no longer control its temperature. Symptoms include confusion or slurred speech, seizures or even loss of consciousness. Heat also increases your risk for a rare condition called rhabdomyolysis, which causes the rapid breakdown of muscles. If you think you or a fellow athlete are in danger, call 911, give them fluids — preferably water — and try to cool their bodies with cold water or cold compresses. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
'Lying and dishonest': RFK Jr. grilled over error-ridden MAHA report during House hearing
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was on the defense Tuesday during an appearance before a House subcommittee. While Kennedy was there to answer questions about his department's fiscal 2026 budget request, Democratic lawmakers seized on the opportunity to grill him over three-plus hours. Democratic Rep. Raul Ruiz of California used his time to question Kennedy about 'The MAHA Report: Make Our Children Healthy Again.' The congressman asked whether Kennedy, as chair of the Make America Healthy Again Commission, had read and fact-checked the report's sources before publication. After Kennedy conceded that he had not fact-checked the report, Ruiz pointed out that the document had several citation errors, with references to papers that do not exist. 'How does that happen under your leadership, sir?' Ruiz asked. Kennedy responded by telling the congressman that 'all of the foundational assertions in that report are accurate.' 'They did not exist,' Ruiz interjected. 'How can they be accurate if they did not exist, sir?' Ruiz added: 'I was a premed [student] at UCLA. … If somebody turned this in, as an undergrad, to their professor at UCLA, they would have received an 'F,' sir, an 'F' — for the misinterpretation, the falsehoods, the denials, and also citing references that don't even exist. That's lying and dishonest, sir.' When it came time for Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to question Kennedy, the New York Democrat asked whether he knew that the Justice Department is reportedly investigating UnitedHealth Group over allegations of Medicare fraud. 'I am not aware of that investigation,' Kennedy replied. Ocasio-Cortez appeared to be in disbelief: 'You are not aware that the Trump Department of Justice is investigating the largest insurance company in America for fraud in Medicare Advantage?' Kennedy repeated that he was not aware but said it did not surprise him. At one point, the hearing was halted after Kennedy hurled accusations at Rep. Frank Pallone after the New Jersey Democrat questioned the health secretary about his recent changes to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP. 'You have made a number of major decisions about vaccines. And … there's been no public comment process or public accountability on that either. What are you afraid of?' Pallone asked. He added: 'The bottom line is here: We have no transparency. ... You feel no responsibility to Congress whatsoever, and you just continue this ideology that's anti-science, anti-vaccine.' While answering a subsequent question from Rep. Neal Dunn, R-Fla., Kennedy turned back to Pallone and accused him of changing his views on vaccines after allegedly receiving money from pharmaceutical companies. 'Fifteen years ago, you and I met. You were, at that time, a champion for people who had suffered injuries from vaccines. ... Since then, you've accepted $2 million from pharmaceutical companies in contributions, more than any other member of this committee,' Kennedy alleged. 'And your enthusiasm for supporting the old ACIP committee, which was completely rife and pervasive with pharmaceutical conflicts, seems to be an outcome of those contributions.' Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., quickly raised a point of order with the subcommittee's chair, Republican Rep. Buddy Carter of Georgia, accusing Kennedy of 'impugning the reputation of a member of Congress.' Shortly thereafter, Carter said DeGette had raised a valid point of order, and he asked the health secretary to 'please take back those words.' 'They're retracted,' Kennedy said. This article was originally published on