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The New Yorker Radio Hour

How Does Extreme Heat Affect the Body?

The New Yorker Radio Hour

WNYC Studios and The New Yorker

News, David, Books, Arts, Storytelling, Wnyc, New, Remnick, News Commentary, Yorker, Politics

4.25.5K Ratings

🗓️ 29 August 2023

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Korey Stringer Institute at the University of Connecticut was named after an N.F.L. player who died of exertional heatstroke. The lab’s main research subjects have been athletes, members of the military, and laborers. But, with climate change, even mild exertion under extreme heat will affect more and more of us; in many parts of the United States, a heat wave and power outage could cause a substantial number of fatalities. Dhruv Khullar, a New Yorker contributor and practicing physician, visited the Stringer Institute to undergo a heat test—walking uphill for ninety minutes in a hundred-and-four-degree temperature—to better understand what’s happening. “I just feel puffy everywhere,” Khullar sighed. “You’d have to cut my finger off just to get my wedding ring off.” By the end of the test, Khullar spoke of cramps, dizziness, and a headache. He discussed the dangers of heatstroke with Douglas Casa, the lab’s head (who himself nearly died of it as a young athlete). “Climate change has taken this into the everyday world for the everyday American citizen. You don’t have to be a laborer working for twelve hours, you don’t have to be a soldier in training,” Casa tells him. “This is making it affect so many people even just during daily living.”

Although the treatment for heat-related illness is straightforward, Casa says that implementation of simple measures remains challenging—and there is much we need to do to better prepare for the global rise in temperature.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is The New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker.

0:11.2

Welcome to The New Yorker Radio Hour.

0:12.9

I'm Parle Sagle, sitting in today for David Remnick.

0:16.3

Later in the show, I'll be talking to the author of Breeding Speedcrasse, a book about

0:20.2

nature and our place in it, a book that over 10 years went from word of mouth cult favorite

0:25.9

to the bestseller lists.

0:28.0

But we're starting the show today with a different kind of story about the environment.

0:31.9

My colleague, through Culler, writes for The New Yorker about medicine and public health

0:36.5

and he's also a physician practicing at a hospital here in New York.

0:40.5

There have been reporting on heat, what it does to us, and what it's going to keep doing

0:46.0

as temperature records keep breaking.

0:48.1

9.

0:49.1

Got it.

0:50.1

We're going to go in 20 seconds.

0:55.0

There are people in the world who set up labs to test how the human body reacts to all

0:59.1

sorts of things.

1:00.1

They can analyze your endocrine system when you produce the lactates that'll slow you

1:05.2

down and there are people who agree to get their bodies tested.

1:10.9

Like me.

1:11.9

I'm Drew Culler, I write for The New Yorker and I'm a doctor.

1:20.0

A few weeks ago, I went to a lab at the University of Connecticut to find out my bodies

1:24.8

VO2 max.

...

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