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Rising Extreme Heat Amplifies Risks for Our Aging Population

August 20, 2025
in Athmospheric
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Silent Perils: The Overlooked Vulnerability of Older Adults to Extreme Heat

As global temperatures rise and heat waves become more frequent and intense, a staggeringly underappreciated demographic remains perilously exposed: older adults. Recent findings from a comprehensive systematic review published in PLOS Climate reveal that despite mounting evidence of their susceptibility, older adults worldwide often underestimate their risk from prolonged and extreme heat events. This gap in risk perception directly undermines preparedness efforts, leaving this rapidly growing segment of the population dangerously unprotected against an increasingly hostile climate.

The review synthesized data from 41 global studies spanning 2010 to 2024, illuminating a critical disparity within research focus. While a majority of studies concentrated on immediate, reactive behaviors — such as staying hydrated or relocating to cooler environments during heat waves — very few addressed advance preparations for enduring heat events. This highlights a fundamental issue: the challenge is not simply surviving heat waves once they hit, but anticipating and mitigating their impacts before they begin. The failure to emphasize preparedness reflects not only research gaps but a broader societal underestimation of extreme heat as a significant climate hazard.

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“Extreme heat remains a largely invisible disaster,” explains Dr. Smitha Rao, assistant professor of social work at The Ohio State University and co-author of the study. Unlike hurricanes or floods which leave clear, tangible destruction, heat’s damage is stealthy and accumulative—thus earning it the chilling epithet ‘silent killer.’ The physiological and systemic stresses it imposes often go unnoticed until tragedy occurs. Among older adults, these effects are compounded by age-related changes in thermoregulation, medication interactions, and chronic health conditions, all of which can impair the body’s ability to respond to heat stress.

Equally troubling is the apparent lack of awareness among caregivers and service providers regarding these subtleties. Fiona Doherty, now an assistant professor of social work at the University of Tennessee and another co-author, highlights that many protective strategies used in the past no longer suffice given modern climatic shifts. Conventional wisdom advises drinking water and seeking shade, but with temperature extremes reaching unprecedented levels, these measures alone may be insufficient. Care systems and public health policies need urgent reevaluation and alignment with current realities to adequately support older adults.

Demographically, the urgency is underlined by shifting population structures. Globally, the number of individuals aged 65 and older is growing faster than any other age group, poised to surpass the population of children under five by 2050. This demographic transition intersects perilously with climate trends. Record-breaking heat events in 2023 and 2024 have signaled a new normal characterized by more frequent, intense, and prolonged heat waves, yet many older adults and their networks remain ill-prepared to navigate these evolving threats.

Physiological aging transforms the human body’s responses to heat in ways that are often underappreciated. As Dr. Rao explains, diminished sweat gland function, reduced cardiovascular capacity, and impaired thirst perception diminish the body’s natural cooling mechanisms. Compounding this is the pharmacological impact of numerous medications common among older adults—diuretics, beta-blockers, and anticholinergics can predispose individuals to dangerous overheating. Despite these well-documented risks, public health messaging remains fragmented, with few targeted interventions to educate and equip this vulnerable cohort effectively.

Another striking revelation from the review is the predominance of heat-related deaths occurring in private residences, particularly during night hours. This raises significant concerns about detection and intervention, as many affected individuals remain socially isolated or fall outside the scope of traditional emergency response systems. It underscores the necessity for innovative community engagement and monitoring approaches that transcend conventional emergency frameworks, incorporating technology and neighborhood networks to provide timely alerts and assistance.

Service delivery in this context is uneven and often overshadowed by cold weather preparedness, as the review reports. Only seven of the 41 studies addressed service delivery specifically geared toward older adults coping with extreme heat, contrasting with a greater emphasis on protecting the elderly against cold. This discrepancy points to systemic gaps in public health priorities and funding allocations, calling for a recalibration to address the mounting threats posed by heat.

Policy frameworks designed to shield older adults from heat hazards are sorely lacking and constitute the least explored research domain, according to the study. Forward-looking policies must move beyond reactive measures and integrate proactive strategies such as home weatherization, subsidized cooling resources, and accessible transportation to cooling centers. Columbus, Ohio, offers an instructive example where the Central Ohio Transit Authority has implemented free bus rides during extreme heat events, ensuring equitable access to cooled public spaces. Such policy innovations represent crucial models for other municipalities confronting similar challenges.

Crucial to all mitigation efforts is a nuanced understanding of the information ecosystems that older adults rely on. A complementary study published in Environmental Communication by some of the same researchers highlights the importance of building trusting relationships between older adults, their communities, and agencies disseminating extreme weather information. Trust not only increases information uptake but also encourages behavioral changes vital for survival in extreme heat scenarios. Cultivating these interpersonal and institutional bonds is foundational to effective community resilience.

The findings collectively urge a paradigm shift in how society perceives and addresses extreme heat in older populations. The once-stable coping mechanisms of hydration and seeking cooler microclimates must give way to robust, integrated preparedness strategies that account for physiological vulnerabilities, social isolation, and systemic barriers. Bridging the current gaps in research, service delivery, and policy is imperative to safeguard this growing demographic from heat’s invisible yet deadly toll.

In conclusion, the new reality of climate-induced heat waves demands urgent, tailored action focusing on prevention and preparedness for older adults. Failure to recalibrate approaches risks exacerbating health disparities and preventable mortalities. Through interdisciplinary research, innovative policy, and strengthened community ties, it is possible to transform silence into resilience, ensuring older adults not only survive but thrive amid intensifying heat threats.


Subject of Research: People

Article Title: Extreme Heat Preparedness and Coping Among Older Adults: A Rapid Review

News Publication Date: August 20, 2025

Web References:

  • https://journals.plos.org/climate/article?id=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000689
  • https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17524032.2025.2536644

References:
Rao, S., Doherty, F., Dabelko-Schoeny, H., Sheldon, M., Traver, A., Zhan, Y., & Rademacher, E. (2025). Extreme Heat Preparedness and Coping Among Older Adults: A Rapid Review. PLOS Climate.
Sheldon, M., Doherty, F., et al. (2025). Extreme Weather Information Preferences Among Diverse Older Adults. Environmental Communication.

Keywords: Extreme heat, older adults, heat preparedness, climate change, vulnerability, public health, risk perception, social work, aging population, heat waves, health policy, community resilience

Tags: climate change impacts on aging populationextreme heat risks for elderlyglobal studies on aging and extreme heathealth effects of high temperatures on elderlymitigating impacts of heat eventspreparedness for heat waves in older adultsproactive measures for heat safetyresearch gaps in elderly heat safetyrisk perception among older adultssilent perils of climate change for seniorsunderappreciated demographic in climate discussionsvulnerability of seniors to climate hazards
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