As Southern California sweats through a period of triple-digit temperatures that started over the weekend, state researchers said Monday that deaths related to a scorching heat wave in 2006 were probably two to three times higher than estimated by coroner's reports.
"Everyone knows [the coroner counts] are a low estimate," said Bart Ostro, lead author of a study published this month and an epidemiologist at the state's Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment. "We're trying to model it and trying to get a better idea of the impact."
The researchers analyzed nine counties, including Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Kern. Whereas coroners in those counties connected about 130 deaths to the heat, with diagnoses including hyperthermia and heatstroke, Ostro's group found that about 350 to 450 deaths were more likely.
Emergency room doctors and public health officials said they have known for years that heat increases mortality and that coroners have been conservative when determining how much of a role heat played in a person's death.
Even if the current heat wave has been less extreme than the one three years ago, doctors said they hoped the study would result in greater public awareness because similar risks apply now. Officials are investigating whether heat was involved in the deaths of two men who were hiking in the Palm Springs area over the weekend, where temperatures hit 118 degrees.
"People with underlying serious problems -- it could be emphysema, it could be heart disease, and it's true particularly for older people -- this could be just enough to tip them over," said Dr. Jonathan Fielding, Los Angeles County director of Public Health.
Meteorologists at the National Weather Service said parts of Los Angeles County reached 110 degrees over the weekend, but they expect the heat to dissipate by the middle of the week.
Public health officials in Los Angeles issued a health alert about high temperatures Monday, encouraging Angelenos to seek out cool locations, check on elderly neighbors and look for symptoms of heat exhaustion such as disorientation and shallow breathing.
Ostro's study of the 2006 deaths, published in the journal Environmental Research, looked at one of the most extreme heat waves in the state's recent history. The high temperatures lasted for at least 10 days in many parts of California, and Woodland Hills hit 119, the highest temperature ever recorded in Los Angeles County by the National Weather Service.