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  Vol. 279 No. 22, June 10, 1998 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Cocaine Use and Death During Heat Waves

Edwin M. Kilbourne, MD

JAMA. 1998;279:1828-1829.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

The heavy toll in human lives claimed by heat waves is increasingly evident in the medical literature. During the heat wave of 1980 in St Louis and Kansas City, Mo, 308 persons more than the number expected to die during that period lost their lives. At the worst of the heat wave, daily mortality in St. Louis increased to 3 times the usual rate.1 More recently, in the summer of 1995 in Chicago, Ill, severe heat-related mortality claimed more than 700 victims, and daily mortality peaked at more than 5 times the usual rate.2

Heatstroke is the only syndrome that is clearly attributable to environmental heat and that has a substantial death-to-case ratio. It might therefore seem logical to ascribe heat wave–related mortality largely to heatstroke. However, an accumulating body of literature strongly suggests that this is not the case. In most heat waves, only a . . . [Full Text of this Article]

From the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga.


RELATED ARTICLE

Ambient Temperature and Mortality From Unintentional Cocaine Overdose
Peter M. Marzuk, Kenneth Tardiff, Andrew C. Leon, Charles S. Hirsch, Laura Portera, M. Irfan Iqbal, Matthew K. Nock, and Nancy Hartwell
JAMA. 1998;279(22):1795-1800.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  






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