Children with Asthma Vulnerable to Extreme Heat

1 May, 2024

Forwarded from US CDC:

Children with Asthma Vulnerable to Extreme Heat (originally sent to HIFA)

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Kids together

*Heat and Health Initiative Releases Clinical Guidance to Protect Children with Asthma*

*Agencies:* NOAA and HHS/CDC

Release Date: April 22, 2024

For children with asthma, heat can provoke asthma symptoms, especially because warmer temperatures can worsen air quality. Breathing polluted air can trigger asthma attacks. In addition, humidity and dehydration can worsen lung function and can contribute to more severe asthma symptoms. Poor and minority children overall experience higher rates of asthma and can suffer disparate impacts from heat. The Heat and Health Initiative has released Clinical Guidance [ https://www.cdc.gov/heat-health/index.html?utm_medium=email&utm_source=g... ] to help health care providers keep at-risk individuals such as children with asthma safe when temperatures rise. This guidance is the first nationally available information for healthcare and public health professionals to protect the population, including those more sensitive to heat, from the impact of heat on their health. Included in the guidance are Patient Management [ https://www.cdc.gov/heat-health/hcp/heat-and-children-with-asthma.html?u... ] and Patient Toolkits [ https://www.cdc.gov/heat-health/hcp/toolkit/tips-and-action-plans-for-ch... ] with tips and action plans for both children and teens with asthma.

The guidance is part of a set of three resources developed by the Health and Health Initiative, a partnership of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) National Weather Service (NWS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to give proactive actions people can take to protect themselves: stay cool; stay hydrated; know the symptoms. Their release coincides with a national federal campaign launched on Earth Day to raise awareness of the health hazards of heat exposure.

The other two resources include the HeatRisk Forecast Tool [ https:/www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/heatrisk?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery ], which provides a seven-day national-scale heat forecast that tells you when temperatures reach levels that could harm health, and CDC’s HeatRisk Dashboard [ https://ephtracking.cdc.gov/Applications/HeatRisk/?utm_medium=email&utm_... ] serves as a portal into all our new heat resources for the nation and includes the HeatRisk Forecast Tool, details on local air quality, and actions to stay safe on hot days or days with poor air quality.

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