More than 47,000 people died in Europe last year due to heat, study estimates. Here are the countries most impacted.

American tourist among the missing in Greece amid dangerous heat wave

Over 47,000 people died in Europe last year due to heat, a new report published Monday in Nature Medicine estimates. The study was led by the Barcelona Institute for Global Health, known as ISGlobal, which looked at a trove of historical temperature and mortality records from 35 different countries to make its calculations.

The year 2023 broke records for being the hottest year to date, and experts think 2024 could be next: The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said there is a 1 in 3 chance that this year will be warmer than 2023. 

Researchers for the Nature Medicine study stipulated the 47,690 estimated deaths occurred between late May and early October, with over half occurring during just two high heat episodes in mid-July and late August.

In a similar study conducted the year prior, ISGlobal researchers estimated over 60,000 people in Europe perished due to heat in 2022.

According to the 2023 tabulations, southern European countries bore the brunt of the heat-related deaths, with Greece, Bulgaria and Italy rounding out the top three spots.

Women and elderly people faced the highest risk when it comes to heat-related deaths, the study found. Notably, the mortality rate was 55% higher in women than in men, and 768% higher in people aged 80 plus than those 65 to 79.

"As people age, their ability to regulate their body temperature, such as sweating and adjusting blood flow, become less efficient," said Dr. Céline Gounder, CBS News medical contributor. "Heat can also exacerbate chronic medical conditions, like heart, lung and kidney disease."

One of the silver linings in an otherwise gloomy report was that societal adaptation to heat over the last century likely saved thousands of lives.

"[These processes] dramatically reduced the heat-related vulnerability and mortality burden of recent summers, especially among the elderly", Elisa Gallo, one of the researchers of the ISGlobal study, said in a statement.

The report on fatal heat conditions comes at a time when tourism is skyrocketing in Europe during the peak summer travel months of June to August. A survey conducted by Allianz Partners found that the number of visitors to the continent increased a whopping 55% from 2022 to 2023.

Droughts, wildfires and high temperatures continue to affect desirable destinations like Greece, which recently captured national attention after a series of hikers went missing or were found dead amid a brutal heat wave. The Mediterranean country has also had to contend with a spate of wildfires, including one currently encroaching on Athens.

The total number of heat-related deaths in Europe —like anywhere— is difficult to parse. The researchers even cautioned that their own findings may underestimate the heat-related mortality burden.

Experts say heat-related deaths and illnesses are likely undercounted. That's because while heat may play a role in someone's death, it is often not recorded as the primary cause of death, unless it's a heat stroke.

"People may present to the emergency department or the hospital with a heart attack, stroke, asthma attack, or kidney failure, and heat is often not recorded in medical records as the underlying cause," said Dr. Gounder.

Kristie Ebi, an epidemiologist and professor of global health at the University of Washington, did not work directly on the study but said that the approach used, known as "excess death analysis," is a much more accurate way to measure the risks people face from exposure to high temperatures. 

"[It] provides insights that can be quite useful for the magnitude of the challenge, without trying to decide at the individual level if this heart attack was exacerbated by the heat, but that one was not," she said.

The Department of Health and Human Services says there were 2,302 heat-related deaths in the United States in 2023. Of note: these were recorded deaths, not estimations like the Nature Medicine study. There is no comparable estimate for the United States. 

Ebi cautions that if the United States' heat-related death counts aren't accurate, the country won't spend enough on the emergency hospital services, cooling centers, and other interventions necessary to save lives.

"If there's just 2,000 deaths from heat, then there is limited incentive for investment," she said.

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