Several people died due to heat-related ailments over the past 24 hours as temperatures continued to soar in northern and central India.
Ten fatalities were recorded at the government hospital in Odisha’s Rourkela region on Thursday, authorities told Reuters news agency.
Heat-stroke related deaths were also reported from the states of Bihar, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, and the national capital, Delhi.
The searing heat came as India held its general election, the results of which will be declared on 4 June.
Mahendra Kumar, district magistrate of Bhojpur district in Bihar, told the Times of India newspaper that three election officers and a policeman died in the city on Thursday due to heat stroke.
“It was the hottest day, and despite having medical facilities at all centres, they collapsed. One home guard [volunteer policeman] became unconscious where he was staying,” Mr Kumar said, adding that the man died in the hospital while being treated by doctors.
He also said that around 30-40 people were admitted to the same hospital on Thursday due to heat-related ailments.
Hospitals in the region recorded a rise in admissions due to heat-related ailments.
On Thursday, a labourer admitted with a heat stroke died while receiving treatment at a hospital in Delhi.
India’s National Centre for Disease Control called heat strokes a “life-threatening” condition with a mortality rate of 40 to 64%.
The heat in northern, central, and parts of western India had been unrelenting for the past two weeks, with maximum temperatures hovering around 45-46°C for days at a stretch and even climbing up to 50°C in some areas.
Several regions experienced severe water and electricity shortages due to a rise in consumption. The soaring temperatures led to a surge in fires across India, and authorities employed drones to monitor forest fires in Jammu and Kashmir.
In the past week, the capital Delhi and surrounding regions experienced record-breaking temperatures nearing 50°C.
Videos of residents in Delhi jostling for water from water tankers were widely shared on social media. Many parts of the capital also experienced frequent power cuts.
Officials were still investigating whether the recorded temperature of 52.9°C in the Mungeshpur area on Wednesday was a result of a sensor malfunction at the nearby weather station.
India saw a 55% rise in deaths due to extreme heat between 2000-2004 and 2017-2021, a study published in the medical journal, The Lancet, found.
Exposure to heat also caused a loss of 167.2 billion potential labour hours among Indians in 2021, the study noted.
While many parts of the country have regularly experienced heatwaves in summer, experts said these were now becoming longer, more intense, and frequent.
source: BBC
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