A new study published in The Lancet shows 6.5% of deaths in this country are attributed to cold weather, compared with 0.5% from hot weather. Most deaths will be from cardiovascular and respiratory disease, as it’s the heart and lungs that struggle when we are outside our comfort zone.
Cold weather causes twice as many deaths (proportional to population) as in Sweden. Australia’s cold weather problem is, when measured in deaths, twice as bad as Sweden’s. People DO die from extreme cold here in Australia, much worse than they do in Europe.
From looking at the study, the definition of “extreme cold” is based on percentile temperature local to the area. So Sydney’s “extreme cold” is less than about 11 ℃, while for Stockholm to be considered “extreme cold” it needs to be below about -6 ℃. The problem with this is that it means any deaths caused by temperatures between -6 and 11 ℃ will inflate Stockholm’s “moderate cold” rates, while they increase Sydney’s “extreme cold”.
Still, I think there’re some really interesting conclusions from this data. Across the board, high temperatures seem to be associated with a lower temperature-related mortality rate than low temperatures are.
https://www.healthyhomes.org.au/news/heh1pp76ot3hpljgf9x3mp7umqndch
Cold weather causes twice as many deaths (proportional to population) as in Sweden. Australia’s cold weather problem is, when measured in deaths, twice as bad as Sweden’s. People DO die from extreme cold here in Australia, much worse than they do in Europe.
From looking at the study, the definition of “extreme cold” is based on percentile temperature local to the area. So Sydney’s “extreme cold” is less than about 11 ℃, while for Stockholm to be considered “extreme cold” it needs to be below about -6 ℃. The problem with this is that it means any deaths caused by temperatures between -6 and 11 ℃ will inflate Stockholm’s “moderate cold” rates, while they increase Sydney’s “extreme cold”.
Still, I think there’re some really interesting conclusions from this data. Across the board, high temperatures seem to be associated with a lower temperature-related mortality rate than low temperatures are.