logo
Amber heat health alert extended as Met Office warns temperatures could hit 35C

Amber heat health alert extended as Met Office warns temperatures could hit 35C

The Sun4 hours ago

A HOT weather health warning has been extended across most of England as temperatures are set to climb to 35C - in one of the hottest June days on record.
Amber heat health alerts for Yorkshire and the Humber, East Midlands, West Midlands, East of England, London, South East and South West have been in place since June 26.
1
They were due to expire by 6pm on Tuesday, but the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) extended them until 9am on Wednesday morning.
A yellow heat health alert has also been extended for the North West.
Health heat alerts are issued by the UKHSA and Met Office when weather conditions are expected to have severe impacts across health and social care services.
This could include a rise in deaths, particularly in people over 65 and those with existing health conditions, including respiratory and cardiovascular diseases.
There are also concerns over an increase in demand on health and care services, and overheated hospitals and care homes.
The alert - the second highest, behind red, on the UKHSA's system - means people should take precautions for their health while enjoying the hot weather, such as staying hydrated and stopping themselves from overheating.
The main risks posed by a very hot weather are dehydration - from not drinking enough water - and overheating, which can make symptoms worse for people who already have problems with their heart of breathing.
The Met predicted temperatures would top 30C across England, including in Manchester, Sheffield, Bristol and Cambridge.
London and the South East of England are expected to sizzle under highs of 34C.
The current hot weather is forecast to continue through Monday and Tuesday, with the potential for temperatures as high as 35C in some areas.
Cheap hacks to stay cool this summer
Dr Agostinho Sousa, head of extreme events and health protection at UKHSA, said: "The current spell of hot weather is forecast to continue until the middle of this week, with temperatures above 30C likely in most regions of England.
"We are reminding everyone to take sensible precautions while enjoying the sun.
"Remember that it is very important to check on friends, family and neighbours who are more vulnerable, as the temperatures we are likely to see over the next few days can result in serious health outcomes across the population, especially for older adults or those with pre-existing health conditions."
Monday is set to be one of the hottest June days ever.
How to stay safe in hot weather
While many people enjoy warmer summer weather, hot weather can cause some people to become unwell through overheating (becoming uncomfortably hot), dehydration, heat exhaustion and heatstroke.
Remember the following tips if you want to stay safe:
Keep out of the sun at the hottest time of the day, between 11am and 3pm
If you are going to do a physical activity (for example exercise or walking the dog), plan to do these during times of the day when it is cooler such as the morning or evening
Keep your home cool by closing windows and curtains in rooms that face the sun
If you do go outside, cover up with suitable clothing such as an appropriate hat and sunglasses, seek shade and apply sunscreen
Drink plenty of fluids and limit your alcohol intake
Check on family, friends and neighbours who may be at higher risk of becoming unwell, and if you are at higher risk, ask them to do the same for you
Know the symptoms of heat exhaustion and heatstroke and what to do if you or someone else has them
Heat exhaustion occurs when the body overheats and cannot cool down. Heat exhaustion does not usually need emergency medical attention if you cool down within 30 minutes.
If you do not take action to cool down, heat exhaustion can lead to heatstroke.
Common symptoms of heat exhaustion include:
Tiredness
Weakness
Feeling faint
Headache
Muscle cramps
Feeling or being sick
Heavy sweating
Intense thirst
Heatstroke is where the body is no longer able to cool down and the body temperature becomes dangerously high.
Common symptoms of heatstroke include:
Heatstroke is a medical emergency. If you think someone has heatstroke you should dial 999 and then try to cool them down.
Source: GOV.UK
UK temperatures have only surpassed 34C on three different occasions since 1960.
The hottest June day ever was 35.6C, recorded on June 28, 1976.
It marks the second heatwave for parts of the UK this month, as temperatures topped 32C earlier in June.
Heatwaves are becoming more frequent, with experts they can become "silent killers" due to their impact on health.
Dr Friederike Otto, associate professor at Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London, said: "Heat waves are called the silent killer, for a reason, every year thousands of people in Europe die due to extreme heat, particularly those that live in poorly insulated homes, on busy, polluted roads, and that already have health problems."
The weather in the UK comes as a heatwave grips much of southern Europe.
Professor Richard Allan, from the University of Reading, said the UK was on the edge of a "large dome of heat" over continental Europe which was driving the heat wave, while ocean temperatures were also up to 2C above average to the south-west of the UK and "hotter still in the western Mediterranean".
"The ebb and flow of gigantic atmospheric waves have generated the stable, cloud-free conditions for heat to build up across western Europe," he said, but added that rising greenhouse gas levels due to human activities were making heat waves more intense.
Temperatures have climbed above 40C in countries including Italy, Spain and Greece, with holiday destinations such as Rome, Milan and Naples under the highest heat alert, while Greece is on high wildfire alert.
After Monday's hot conditions, the Met Office said a tropical night may also be on the cards, with temperatures not falling below 20C overnight in some places into Tuesday.
But Northern England, Northern Ireland and Scotland face a cloudier, cooler day on Monday with some outbreaks of rain moving across Northern Ireland and western Scotland.
Parts of south-east England could hit 35C on Tuesday before some fresher conditions move in from the west through the rest of the week, the Met Office said.
Met Office Chief Meteorologist Paul Gundersen said: "Temperatures are rising further today with low 30C widely across England including places like Manchester, Sheffield, Bristol and Cambridge.
"The highest temperature is expected to be 34C in London and the south east of England.
"These high temperatures and humid conditions will be quite uncomfortable for those working outside as well as people leaving Glastonbury and attending the start of Wimbledon and other outdoor events.
"Stay hydrated and try to keep out of the sun during the hottest part of the day," he advised.
The signs of heat exhaustion - and when it becomes heatstroke
Heat exhaustion does not usually need emergency medical help if you can cool down within 30 minutes.
The signs include:
Tiredness
Dizziness
Headache
Feeling sick or being sick
Excessive sweating and skin becoming pale and clammy or getting a heat rash, but a change in skin colour can be harder to see on brown and black skin
Cramps in the arms, legs and stomach
Fast breathing or heartbeat
A high temperature
Being very thirsty
Weakness
Diarrhoea
HEATSTROKE is a medical emergency, so get inside and call 999 for an ambulance.
Stay with the person, who may not be able to help themselves. Try to remove clothes if possible and lie the person down.
Use a cool flannel and sponge them down and use a fan to try and help them lose heat by evaporation.
If they are conscious and able, try to encourage them to drink. If they lose consciousness, put them into the recovery position while you wait for an ambulance.
The NHS says to call 999 for signs of heatstroke that include:
Still being unwell after 30 minutes of resting in a cool place, being cooled and drinking fluids
A very high temperature
Hot skin that's not sweating and might look red (this can be harder to see on brown and black skin)
A fast heartbeat
Fast breathing or shortness of breath
Confusion and lack of coordination
A seizure or fit
Loss of consciousness

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I wear a prosthetic leg... even though I still have both of my feet
I wear a prosthetic leg... even though I still have both of my feet

Daily Mail​

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

I wear a prosthetic leg... even though I still have both of my feet

A woman who wears a prosthetic leg has revealed that she still has both of her feet - with one attached to her thigh. Emily Fogly, 27, who had pediatric bone cancer, had part of her knee removed after being diagnosed when she was just 15 years old. 'It's a very unique surgery called an amputation rotationplasty, which is a type of amputation,' she explained in a recent TikTok video. 'It's really hard to process if you haven't seen one for yourself,' she added. According to the Cleveland Clinic, a rotationplasty is a type of amputation that preserves the lower part of your leg after removing the knee. 'A surgeon removes the diseased or injured upper part of your leg, then reattaches the lower part (shin, ankle and foot) to your remaining thigh,' the site explained. 'But they rotate the lower part 180 degrees before reattaching it, so your foot points backward.' The surgery is an alternative to an above the knee surgery, using the still existing and working joint to help the patient walk. Because Emily's foot is attached below the knee, she slips her foot into the prosthetic leg when she walks. 'When I bend and point my foot, it moves the whole bottom of the prosthetic,' she explains. 'Modern technology and a good prosthetic, it can look really realistic,' Emily continued. The new mom showed a spot on the ankle which she can push to adjust the joint on her prosthetic leg so she can wear different shoes - including heels. 'People with this type of amputation can run, swim, hike, snowboard, dance,' she listed. 'For me personally it's given me a much better quality of life.' The area around Emily's knee was removed due to bone cancer. The surgery took a total of 19 hours to complete, which included fusing bones together and coiling nerves and blood vessels. She added that it wasn't her doctor's first choice of treatment, recalling a 'ton' of surgeries in which they tried to save her entire leg. '[I was] also doing chemotherapy which hinders your ability to heal,' she added. 'But it never quite healed.' Emily said there was so much scar tissue surrounding the surgical sites that she couldn't bend it, making every day tasks impossible. According to the Cleveland Clinic, a rotationplasty is a type of amputation that preserves the lower part of your leg after removing the knee She explained her leg 'looked' like a leg, but wasn't functioning properly and didn't get any better after she stopped chemotherapy, which is when she entertained the idea of an amputation. 'In hindsight, I wish I would have done that right off the bat,' she shared. 'I don't regret my choice,' she declared. In a comment, she admitted she 'definitely' had to train her brain to move her foot differently and get used to it. 'But my body learned to adapt surprisingly quick!' she said. The Cleveland Clinic says children make the best candidates for rotationplasty because their bones are still growing.

The 4 reasons you should never sleep with a fan on
The 4 reasons you should never sleep with a fan on

Scotsman

time39 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

The 4 reasons you should never sleep with a fan on

Met Office warns it will be a 'tropical night' for many in the UK 😲 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Temperatures are soaring in the UK again. Mercury is being forecast to hit 30 degrees or more. But should you try to keep yourself cool overnight? Many of us are set for a 'tropical night' as temperatures skyrocket in the latest heatwave. After a reprieve, the sweltering heat has returned and it could reach as much as 34C in places. Brits are being urged to 'stay hydrated' and 'try to keep out of the sun' by the Met Office. The warning comes as the crowds begin to leave Glastonbury and Wimbledon kicks-off. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The forecaster's Chief Meteorologist, Paul Gundersen warns: 'Tonight temperatures will remain high, with some locations not dropping below 20°C in what is called a tropical night'. But with it looking set to be uncomfortably warm when you head to bed, you might be wondering whether you should leave your fan on overnight. Here's all you need to know: Should you sleep with a fan on in a heatwave? Should you sleep with a fan on? | Adobe It is set to be another boiling hot day and there won't be much escape even after the sun goes down. In many places it won't drop below 20C, even at night. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Met Office's Chief Meteorologist Gundersen adds: 'These sorts of temperatures make it hard to sleep and prevent any recovery from the high daytime temperatures too.' You may then be tempted to try and find a way to cool yourself down and help you sleep. Most people probably don't have air conditioning in the house, but you may have a fan. Sleep Advisor warns that while you may have some advantages from leaving your fan on overnight - there can be 'negative side effects'. It could trigger allergies by recirculating dust or particles in your bedroom throughout the night. The fan could also cause the air around you to dry out and could potentially lead to you waking up with a sore throat. Sleep Advisor also adds that sleeping with a breeze directly on you could cause you to wake up stiff or with sore muscles. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Looking ahead to the rest of the week, the Met Office's Chief Meteorologist adds: 'Tuesday will be another hot day, though the highest temperatures will be more confined to the south east of England where 35°C is possible. 'Fresher air and some rainfall will move in from the west through the rest of the week, bringing an end to this heatwave, although many parts will remain dry and still see plenty of sunshine.' As the weather heats up, we look back at the most popular ice creams of the 60s, 70s and 80s which we've loved and lost . How many do you remember?

Why is the UK experiencing a heatwave and what can people do in response?
Why is the UK experiencing a heatwave and what can people do in response?

The Independent

time43 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Why is the UK experiencing a heatwave and what can people do in response?

Temperatures are set to climb to as high as 35C in the latest heatwave to hit parts of the UK. So what is causing it and what are the impacts? – What is causing the heatwave? The UK is on the edge of a 'heat dome' currently sitting over continental Europe which has pushed temperatures to extreme highs in places such as Spain, Italy and Greece. Dr Akshay Deoras, from the University of Reading, says the heat dome, an area of high pressure currently centred on Denmark, with the UK on its western edge, is 'bringing stable, mostly cloudless weather and drawing in hot, dry air from the south'. Dr Michael Byrne, reader in climate science at the University of St Andrews, said heat domes, which occur when high pressure weather systems that normally last a few days get stuck in place for a week or more, are 'nothing new'. But they and other scientists are clear that climate change – caused by human activity such as burning fossil fuels – is making heatwaves more frequent and intense. – So what is the role of climate change in heatwaves? Put simply, the Earth has warmed significantly since pre-industrial times due to humans putting more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere which trap more heat. When hot conditions occur on top of that background warming, for example during a heat dome situation, they are hotter than they would be without it, while it also means heatwaves occur more frequently. So while Dr Byrne says there is nothing new about heat domes, 'what is new are the temperatures heat domes deliver: Europe is more than 2C warmer than in pre-industrial times, so when a heat dome occurs it drives a hotter heatwave', he says. Dr Ben Clarke, research associate in extreme weather and climate change at the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London, says that without climate change, the UK would still experience periods of fine, warm weather in June – but the hotter atmosphere means that 'fine' weather is now very hot. 'In short, climate change is making 'nice' weather more dangerous, and already dangerous weather more deadly,' he warned. – How do we know climate change is making heatwaves hotter and more frequent? Scientists have conducted numerous 'attribution' studies to assess the role of climate change in extreme weather such as heatwaves, comparing the current conditions with what would have happened in a world without global warming. For example in the summer of 2022, when temperatures smashed through the 40C mark for the first time on record in the UK, scientists found it would have been 'almost impossible' without global warming. Most recently, the same World Weather Attribution group of scientists found the heatwave earlier this month was made about 100 times more likely, or around 2-4C hotter due to global warming. And Met Office analysis has found the kind of 40C temperatures seen in 2022 have a 50:50 chance of happening again in the next 12 years as the risk of extreme heat rises with climate change – with temperatures of 45C now possible in the UK. – What are the impacts of heatwaves? Scientists such as Dr Fredi Otto, from the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial and one of the scientists leading the World Weather Attribution work, label heatwaves as 'silent killers'. 'Every year thousands of people in Europe die due to extreme heat, particularly those that live in poorly insulated homes, on busy, polluted roads, and that have already health problems,' she said. Particularly at risk are those who are older, or have pre-existing health conditions: more than 1,000 excess deaths among older people were recorded around the four-day peak of the July 2022 heatwave, with more than 3,000 heat-related deaths in England over that summer. Heatwaves also lead to increased calls to ambulance and emergency services, affect the functioning of hospitals, care homes and schools, hit outdoor workers and damage agriculture, cause transport disruption, raise the risk of wildfires and put water supplies under pressure. Experts also warn extreme heat is linked to worsening symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress, and to increased violence. – So what can people do to protect themselves? Experts suggest a number of practical steps people can take to protect themselves and others against this week's extreme heat. These include trying to keep homes cool by closing windows and curtains during the day to keep out the heat, and opening them at night when it is cooler, drinking plenty of non-alcoholic cold drinks, staying out of the sun, avoiding exercise and checking on elderly people. Measures are also needed to protect communities, including green spaces, better quality housing, temporary cooling centres, and even rescheduling large-scale outdoor events outside the summer months, according to Dr Malcolm Mistry, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Ultimately though, the risk of extreme heat is only going to worsen with continued climate change, with scientists warning the only way to curb global warming is to cut greenhouse gas emissions to net zero worldwide. As Professor James Dyke, assistant director of the Global Systems Institute at the University of Exeter, puts it: 'These latest European heatwaves are the result of record-breaking greenhouse gas emissions. 'Europe is the fastest-warming continent as a result of human-caused climate change. 'The only way to avoid even more extreme heat is to rapidly phase out fossil fuels.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store