Girls, with faces covered to protect themselves from sun stroke, walk along a road on a hot summer day in Allahabad, yesterday.

AFP/New Delhi

Authorities yesterday urged hospitals to treat heatstroke as an emergency as the toll from a long heatwave topped 1,800 yesterday, making it the deadliest in more than two decades.
Hundreds of mainly poor people die at the height of summer every year in India, but this year’s figures are already nearly double the annual average.
Experts say the official figures likely understate the true impact because heatstroke disproportionately affects the poor and homeless, who are less likely to die in hospitals.
Most of the confirmed deaths are in the southern states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, where doctors described hospitals overflowing with victims of severe heatstroke.
P Tulsi Rani, special commissioner for disaster management in the state, said the high number of deaths was down to record high temperatures over a longer period that usual.
“So many people died this year because the heat wave is continuing for a longer period than it normally does, and also record temperatures have been recorded in a number of places,” he said.
“It (the heatwave) has been continuing for a longer period, for about seven to eight days now, whereas usually it only lasts for a few days.”
Authorities in Telangana said they were running a television campaign to teach people how to stay cool and recognise the symptoms of heat stroke, which can be fatal if left untreated.
Streets of the state capital Hyderabad were deserted during the hottest period of the day, with many shops and businesses shut.
“All month I’ve basically stayed inside the house,” said 28-year-old Tejaswini Madhabhushi, who works at a policy institute in the city.
“The biggest problem is the power cuts. If they cut power in the afternoon then it gets unbearably hot, and we also run into a water shortage since the overhead tanks can’t be refilled.”


Related Story