logo
India's heatwaves worsening, but no one knows how many dying

India's heatwaves worsening, but no one knows how many dying

The Hindu6 hours ago

On a scorching May afternoon last year, a ragpicker in Delhi's Ghazipur area collapsed from heat exhaustion.
"The family rushed him to the hospital," says Majida Begum, a sanitation worker who witnessed it. "But he was declared dead on arrival. They had no proof that he died due to heat, so they were not given any compensation." His death was never officially counted, just one of the countless lives lost in India's intensifying heatwaves that go unrecorded and uncompensated.
An investigation by PTI reveals that disjointed, outdated reporting systems are obscuring the true toll, weakening both public awareness and policy action. Accurate data on heat-related deaths helps identify who is most at risk. Without it, the government cannot plan effectively, create targeted policies or take timely action to save lives.
But behind the missing numbers are real people, many poor and undocumented, whose deaths routinely slip through the cracks of India's incoherent reporting system.
Currently, at least three separate datasets attempt to monitor heatstroke or heat-related deaths. The two most-commonly cited in the media are maintained by the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) under the Health Ministry and the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) under the Home Ministry. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) also carries figures on deaths caused by "heatwaves" in its annual reports, drawing data primarily from media coverage.
However, these three sources report widely-varying numbers.
For instance, data obtained through an RTI query from the Health Ministry shows 3,812 heat-related deaths recorded between 2015 and 2022 under the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP), managed by the NCDC.
In contrast, NCRB figures, cited in Parliament many times by Union Earth Sciences Minister Jitendra Singh, put the number at 8,171 deaths from "heat/sunstroke" during the same period.
Meanwhile, the IMD's annual reports record 3,436 deaths due to "heatwave" between 2015 and 2022.
While the NCDC and the IMD have already released the figures for 2023 and 2024, the NCRB is yet to publish the data for these years.
Since 2015, the Health Ministry has been collecting data on heat illness and deaths from April to July. In 2019, this was extended to March through July, covering 23 states.
The NCRB has recorded heatstroke deaths since 1995, listing them as "accidental deaths from forces of nature" since around 2010.
Experts' view
PTI spoke to government officials and healthcare-policy experts to understand the large discrepancies between these datasets.
A senior Delhi Police official explained that the NCRB data largely reflects the number of unattended individuals found dead by police at public spaces, homes and elsewhere. Such bodies are taken to hospitals where doctors conduct autopsies to determine the cause of death.
According to the NCRB, 730 people died from "heat/sunstroke" in 2022, 374 in 2021 and 530 in 2020. By contrast, the NCDC data shows just 33 heat-related deaths in 2022, none in 2021 and four in 2020, as many states failed to report their figures.
These states included Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu.
A Health Ministry official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the data from the NCRB and the NCDC are "not directly comparable" because they originate from different sources.
"The NCDC reports deaths of patients who come to hospital OPDs or are admitted. But if a person dies and is brought for autopsy, that data goes to the forensic medicine department, which may not always share the information with the NCDC," the official said. He acknowledged the existence of multiple datasets on heat deaths in India and noted that "none of those alone gives the full picture".
"While knowing the actual number of heat deaths is important for policy making, confirming such deaths is difficult even with health ministry guidelines," he added.
The official said surveillance systems often capture only a fraction of actual cases for other communicable and non-communicable diseases. "We have some numbers, but never the full picture," he said.
One major challenge in data collection is the absence of an electronic record system.
"Healthcare facilities still enter data manually. Confirming heat-related deaths is already difficult and manual data entry makes accurate reporting even harder," said another official.
Though the Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP) enables digital submission of surveillance data like that of heat-related deaths, the hospital staff manually enter the information into online forms. There is no automated data transfer from hospital records.
Officials also said that while states are mandated to report data, compliance is poor. For example, the hospital staff sometimes omit reporting if temperatures drop due to cloudy weather.
A senior doctor from a Central government-run hospital in Delhi, speaking anonymously, said most hospitals are understaffed which hampers proper data collection and timely reporting.
The doctor also alleged that authorities may suppress death figures to avoid compensation liabilities.
At the India Heat Summit 2025 in May, Health Ministry Advisor Soumya Swaminathan highlighted the weaknesses in the country's death-reporting systems.
"I have been saying this since my time at the Indian Council of Medical Research — death-reporting systems need strengthening because they provide the best source for the government and policymakers to understand causes of death, which should inform policy," she said.
Abhiyant Tiwari, Lead for Climate Resilience and Health at NRDC India, said attributing deaths directly to heat remains a global challenge, not just in India.
Mr. Tiwari, who has contributed to heat action plans at city and district levels, said the all-cause mortality data is more reliable for assessing vulnerability and setting early-warning thresholds, as it captures the total number of deaths during heat events, not only those officially classified as heatstroke deaths.
Many heat-related deaths go unrecorded or are misclassified as heart attacks or other causes. By comparing mortality during heatwaves to normal periods, experts estimate that the excess deaths are likely attributable to extreme heat, he said. He stressed the need to improve the reporting of the all-cause mortality data and suggested appointing a single department responsible for its collection and dissemination.
As climate change intensifies heatwaves, Avinash Chanchal, deputy programme director at Greenpeace South Asia, called for urgent reforms in how heat-related deaths are recorded.
"Discrepancies between departments and widespread underreporting mean the true toll of extreme heat often remains hidden. The government must understand that hiding or ignoring the true numbers delays the urgent action needed to address heat," he said.
Until India fixes its fractured data system, the dead will remain just a number or worse, not counted at all, Mr. Chanchal said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

COVID-19 update, 9 June 2025: India nears 6,500 active cases; 163 XFG variant cases detected; zero deaths in 24 hours
COVID-19 update, 9 June 2025: India nears 6,500 active cases; 163 XFG variant cases detected; zero deaths in 24 hours

Mint

time16 minutes ago

  • Mint

COVID-19 update, 9 June 2025: India nears 6,500 active cases; 163 XFG variant cases detected; zero deaths in 24 hours

Covid-19 Update, June 9: India's active Covid-19 tally on Monday, June 9 neared the 6500 mark, recording 358 new cases, with majority of them reported in Gujarat and Karnataka. The emerging XFG variant of the COVID-19 virus has been detected in 163 samples so far, with Maharashtra accounting for the highest number of cases. As per the latest data by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, the tally for active COVID cases in India stands at 6491, as compared to yesterday's figure of 6133 cases. However, no deaths have been reported in the last 24 hours. Gujarat reported the sharpest rise in COVID-19 cases on Monday, recording 158 fresh infections — the highest among all states. Karnataka followed with 57 new cases, while West Bengal logged 54 infections, marking the state with the third-highest surge of the day, as per data from the Health Ministry. According to data from the Indian SARS-CoV-2 Genomics Consortium (INSACOG), the emerging XFG variant of the COVID-19 virus has been detected in 163 samples so far. Maharashtra reported the highest number with 89 cases, followed by Tamil Nadu (16), Kerala (15), Gujarat (11), and six cases each in Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and West Bengal, reported PTI. Noida, India- June 08, 2025: Some commuters wearing face masks to prevent the spread of coronavirus disease. India's active Covid-19 case tally has crossed the 6,000-mark with 378 fresh cases reported in the last 24 hours, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare's (MoHFW) data, in Noida, India, on Sunday, June 08, 2025. (Photo by Sunil Ghosh / Hindustan Times) Karnataka reported 265 Covid-19 cases, pushing the positivity rate to 40.7 per cent. Total cases registered so far in the state this year stands at 1,220, the health department said. Active cases in the state have breached 500-mark with 559 cases, of which only two cases required intensive care. Madhya Pradesh's Gwalior district reported six active cases on Monday. Among the six, three are doctors. The remaining three patients have a travel history. One of them recently came from Badrinath, Chief Medical and Health Officer (CMHO) Dr Sachin Srivastava told ANI. Maharashtra reported 65 COVID-19 cases on Monday taking the state's tally since January 1 this year to 1,504, the health department said. The 65 fresh infections comprise 29 from Pune, 22 from Mumbai, five from Nagpur, four from Kolhapur, two from Thane district and one each from Sangli, Satara and Parbhani. Odisha reported four more Covid-19 cases on Monday. Till date, 15 patients have recovered from the infection with the total active cases in the state standing at 34. Out of the 358 fresh Covid-19 cases reported across India, Delhi accounted for 42 new cases, Kerala (7) and Madhya Pradesh (4).

Mamata Banerjee holds meet on COVID preparedness, says there is no reason to panic
Mamata Banerjee holds meet on COVID preparedness, says there is no reason to panic

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Mamata Banerjee holds meet on COVID preparedness, says there is no reason to panic

Amid spike in COVID-19 cases, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee held a meeting on preparedness of the State on Monday (June 9, 2025). While stressing that there was nothing to panic about, the Chief Minister asked authorities to keep infrastructure updated to ensure immediate response in case of emergencies. West Bengal reported 747 active cases, among the highest in the country at the moment. Ms. Banerjee has taken note of the situation and asked officials to maintain vigilance. 'Whoever is responsible for handling this disease, including rural and urban healthcare workers, corporation, health department, police, we called everyone and did a COVID preparedness meeting,' Ms. Banerjee said. 'Do not cause panic, but we need to stay alert, in case there is any abnormal spike, we will stay prepared. People who have co-morbidities need to take more care and seek medical help,' Ms. Banerjee, who also heads the Health Ministry in the State, added. The Chief Minister also urged people to visit government hospitals to treat COVID-19 so that no one incurs extra expenses. She said that medical needs of affected persons will be taken care of at public health facilities. Similar sentiments were echoed by medical professionals from the State. Dr. Sujan Bardhan, Consultant (Tuberculosis & Chest Diseases), Narayana Hospital, RN Tagore Hospital Mukundapur, 'While the rise in COVID-19 cases in Bengal and the report of one death may cause concern, vigilance, not panic, is the best response. The key difference with these new strains is their speed, not their severity. Hospitals are well-prepared, and the healthcare system remains under no immediate strain. Nonetheless, the importance of basic preventive measures cannot be overstated.'

India's heatwaves worsening, but no one knows how many dying
India's heatwaves worsening, but no one knows how many dying

The Hindu

time6 hours ago

  • The Hindu

India's heatwaves worsening, but no one knows how many dying

On a scorching May afternoon last year, a ragpicker in Delhi's Ghazipur area collapsed from heat exhaustion. "The family rushed him to the hospital," says Majida Begum, a sanitation worker who witnessed it. "But he was declared dead on arrival. They had no proof that he died due to heat, so they were not given any compensation." His death was never officially counted, just one of the countless lives lost in India's intensifying heatwaves that go unrecorded and uncompensated. An investigation by PTI reveals that disjointed, outdated reporting systems are obscuring the true toll, weakening both public awareness and policy action. Accurate data on heat-related deaths helps identify who is most at risk. Without it, the government cannot plan effectively, create targeted policies or take timely action to save lives. But behind the missing numbers are real people, many poor and undocumented, whose deaths routinely slip through the cracks of India's incoherent reporting system. Currently, at least three separate datasets attempt to monitor heatstroke or heat-related deaths. The two most-commonly cited in the media are maintained by the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) under the Health Ministry and the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) under the Home Ministry. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) also carries figures on deaths caused by "heatwaves" in its annual reports, drawing data primarily from media coverage. However, these three sources report widely-varying numbers. For instance, data obtained through an RTI query from the Health Ministry shows 3,812 heat-related deaths recorded between 2015 and 2022 under the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP), managed by the NCDC. In contrast, NCRB figures, cited in Parliament many times by Union Earth Sciences Minister Jitendra Singh, put the number at 8,171 deaths from "heat/sunstroke" during the same period. Meanwhile, the IMD's annual reports record 3,436 deaths due to "heatwave" between 2015 and 2022. While the NCDC and the IMD have already released the figures for 2023 and 2024, the NCRB is yet to publish the data for these years. Since 2015, the Health Ministry has been collecting data on heat illness and deaths from April to July. In 2019, this was extended to March through July, covering 23 states. The NCRB has recorded heatstroke deaths since 1995, listing them as "accidental deaths from forces of nature" since around 2010. Experts' view PTI spoke to government officials and healthcare-policy experts to understand the large discrepancies between these datasets. A senior Delhi Police official explained that the NCRB data largely reflects the number of unattended individuals found dead by police at public spaces, homes and elsewhere. Such bodies are taken to hospitals where doctors conduct autopsies to determine the cause of death. According to the NCRB, 730 people died from "heat/sunstroke" in 2022, 374 in 2021 and 530 in 2020. By contrast, the NCDC data shows just 33 heat-related deaths in 2022, none in 2021 and four in 2020, as many states failed to report their figures. These states included Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. A Health Ministry official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the data from the NCRB and the NCDC are "not directly comparable" because they originate from different sources. "The NCDC reports deaths of patients who come to hospital OPDs or are admitted. But if a person dies and is brought for autopsy, that data goes to the forensic medicine department, which may not always share the information with the NCDC," the official said. He acknowledged the existence of multiple datasets on heat deaths in India and noted that "none of those alone gives the full picture". "While knowing the actual number of heat deaths is important for policy making, confirming such deaths is difficult even with health ministry guidelines," he added. The official said surveillance systems often capture only a fraction of actual cases for other communicable and non-communicable diseases. "We have some numbers, but never the full picture," he said. One major challenge in data collection is the absence of an electronic record system. "Healthcare facilities still enter data manually. Confirming heat-related deaths is already difficult and manual data entry makes accurate reporting even harder," said another official. Though the Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP) enables digital submission of surveillance data like that of heat-related deaths, the hospital staff manually enter the information into online forms. There is no automated data transfer from hospital records. Officials also said that while states are mandated to report data, compliance is poor. For example, the hospital staff sometimes omit reporting if temperatures drop due to cloudy weather. A senior doctor from a Central government-run hospital in Delhi, speaking anonymously, said most hospitals are understaffed which hampers proper data collection and timely reporting. The doctor also alleged that authorities may suppress death figures to avoid compensation liabilities. At the India Heat Summit 2025 in May, Health Ministry Advisor Soumya Swaminathan highlighted the weaknesses in the country's death-reporting systems. "I have been saying this since my time at the Indian Council of Medical Research — death-reporting systems need strengthening because they provide the best source for the government and policymakers to understand causes of death, which should inform policy," she said. Abhiyant Tiwari, Lead for Climate Resilience and Health at NRDC India, said attributing deaths directly to heat remains a global challenge, not just in India. Mr. Tiwari, who has contributed to heat action plans at city and district levels, said the all-cause mortality data is more reliable for assessing vulnerability and setting early-warning thresholds, as it captures the total number of deaths during heat events, not only those officially classified as heatstroke deaths. Many heat-related deaths go unrecorded or are misclassified as heart attacks or other causes. By comparing mortality during heatwaves to normal periods, experts estimate that the excess deaths are likely attributable to extreme heat, he said. He stressed the need to improve the reporting of the all-cause mortality data and suggested appointing a single department responsible for its collection and dissemination. As climate change intensifies heatwaves, Avinash Chanchal, deputy programme director at Greenpeace South Asia, called for urgent reforms in how heat-related deaths are recorded. "Discrepancies between departments and widespread underreporting mean the true toll of extreme heat often remains hidden. The government must understand that hiding or ignoring the true numbers delays the urgent action needed to address heat," he said. Until India fixes its fractured data system, the dead will remain just a number or worse, not counted at all, Mr. Chanchal said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store