Showing posts with label heatstroke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heatstroke. Show all posts

Sunday, June 23, 2024

When it's hot, drink more water; here are ways to get that done

Photo illustration from CDC
Kentucky Health News


Staying hydrated is essential to maintaining health, especially during summer months. Aside from preventing dehydration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that water helps your body maintain normal temperature, facilitate joint movement and protection, protect sensitive tissues like your spinal cord and remove waste through sweat, urination and bowel movements.

Here are tips for staying hydrated this summer, and there are more available at cdc.gov/healthy-weight-growth/water-healthy-drinks/index.html.

Upgrade your water bottle. Buying a reusable water bottle to refill throughout the day can help ensure you drink enough water. Freezing pre-filled plastic water bottles can be a great way to make sure you have access to cold water throughout the day, especially if you plan to spend an extended amount of time outside. Consider buying a flavor-infusing water bottle to add fruit flavors to your water if you dislike the taste of plain water.

Cut back on other drinks. Substitute water for sugary drinks like sodas or teas when you feel thirsty and consume alcohol, caffeine and energy drinks in moderation. Sports drinks can be a good way to restore electrolytes after prolonged periods of sweating and heavy physical activity, but avoid consuming them outside of regenerating electrolytes. Remember that choosing to drink water as often as possible will help keep you hydrated.

Make water part of your meals. Water is usually a drink option at restaurants, so choose to order water when given the opportunity. If you plan to host dinners or parties this summer, serve water and water-based drinks with your meals. Serve recipes with fruits and vegetables that contain water, like cucumbers and tomatoes. Whether you plan to eat indoors or outside, consider keeping a pitcher of ice water on the table during meals so guests can refill their glasses as they need to. Add a wedge of lime or lemon to your water.

Some other beverages can be part of healthy eating patterns: Plain coffee or teas, sparkling water, seltzers, and flavored waters are low-calorie choices. Low-fat or fat-free milk; unsweetened, fortified milk alternatives; and 100% fruit or vegetable juice contain important nutrients. Enjoy these drinks within recommended calorie limits. Milk contains important nutrients such as calcium, potassium, and vitamin D.

What about other beverages? Here's what the CDC says:
  • Sugary drinks: Regular sodas, fruit drinks, sports drinks, energy drinks, sweetened waters, and sweetened coffee and tea contain calories but little nutritional value. Learn how to Rethink Your Drink.
  • Alcoholic drinks: If you choose to drink alcohol, do so in moderation.
  • Caffeinated drinks: Moderate caffeine consumption (up to 400 mg per day) can be a part of a healthy diet. That's about 3 to 5 cups of plain coffee.
  • Drinks with sugar alternatives: Drinks that are labeled "sugar-free" or "diet" likely contain high-intensity sweeteners, such as sucralose, aspartame, or saccharine. These sweeteners may reduce caloric intake in the short term. However, there are many questions about the sweeteners' effectiveness for long-term weight management.
  • Energy drinks: In addition to added sugar, these products may also contain large amounts of caffeine and other legal stimulants. Concerns have been raised about the potential health risks of these products, especially for young people. 
Regularly consuming water during the summer will help you stay hydrated and healthy. Find more resources about water and hydration at nutrition.gov/topics/basic-nutrition/water-hydration-and-health and heart.org/en/healthy-living/fitness/fitness-basics/staying-hydrated-staying-healthy.

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

The heat is on; here's how to keep your heart healthy in summer

By Dr. Vincent Sorrell
Chief of cardiology, UK HealthCare

Memorial Day marks the unofficial start to summer. From outdoor barbecues to lounging by the pool, summertime means more time spent outdoors with friends and family. But fun in the sun comes with risks.

Humans regulate heat through blood flow. A healthy heart dissipates heat by pushing blood toward the skin. We also shed heat through sweat. People with pre-existing heart conditions are especially at risk, as heat can put extra stress on the heart. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 600 people die every year from preventable, heat-related illnesses. More than 65,000 are treated in the emergency room for heat stroke, heat exhaustion and dehydration.

It’s important to recognize the signs of heat exhaustion and heat stroke and what to do is someone is in danger. With heat exhaustion, look for signs such as heavy sweating, paleness, muscle cramps, fatigue, and dizziness or fainting. It can be treated by moving the person indoors and cooling them off with a cool cloth. If they don’t improve in an hour, seek medical help.

Heat stroke is more severe. Symptoms include high body temperature (above 103ยบ F), skin that’s red and hot but not sweaty, rapid pulse, throbbing headache, and dizziness and confusion. Heat stroke is a medical emergency — call 911 right away if you see someone in distress.

Dehydration can begin within just a few hours of the onset of extreme heat. Signs of dehydration include fatigue, headache, muscle cramps, dizziness and dry mouth. Dehydration causes the heart to pump harder, which can put heart patients at further risk. Elderly patients in particular need to drink up, as they may not feel thirsty until they are dehydrated. Some patients may still not feel thirsty even after they become dehydrated.

Here are some ways you can stay safe in the sun:

Drink lots of water. Hydration helps the heart pump more easily and helps the muscles work more efficiently. The more you sweat, the more you need to replenish fluids. Skip the alcohol, coffee and tea as it can further dehydrate you. It’s important to keep drinking, even if you don’t feel thirsty.

Keep your cool. In excessively hot temperatures, stay indoors. If you must be outside, find a shady spot and use a fan or a damp towel to stay cool. At the peak of heat in the early afternoon, avoid being outside for prolonged periods of time. Wear loose, light-colored clothing as well as a hat.

Monitor medications. Due to the extra strain of heat, heart patients need to be diligent in keeping up their prescription regime.

Be smart when it comes to exercise. Exercise is important for long-term heart health. If you don’t have the option to take your work out indoors, stick to the early hours of the day. Take it easy — avoid excessive or intense effort in extreme heat.

Thursday, August 4, 2022

'Children are not little adults' and need special care in heat waves

Photo by Cavan via Getty Images and Kaiser Health News
By Emmarie Huetteman
Kaiser Health News

After more than a week of record-breaking temperatures across much of the country, public-health experts are cautioning that children are more susceptible to heat illness than adults are — even more so when they’re on the athletic field, living without air conditioning, or waiting in a parked car.

Cases of heat-related illness are rising with average air temperatures, and experts say almost half of those getting sick are children. The reason is twofold: Children’s bodies have more trouble regulating temperature than those of adults, and they rely on adults to help protect them from overheating.

Parents, coaches, and other caretakers, who can experience the same heat very differently than kids do, may struggle to identify a dangerous situation or catch the early symptoms of heat-related illness in children.

“Children are not little adults,” said Dr. Aaron Bernstein, a pediatric hospitalist at Boston Children’s Hospital. 

As record heat becomes more frequent, posing serious risks even to healthy adults, the number of cases of heat-related illnesses has gone up, including among children. Those most at risk are young children in parked vehicles and adolescents returning to school and participating in sports during the hottest days of the year.

More than 9,000 high school athletes are treated for heat-related illnesses every year.

Heat-related illnesses occur when exposure to high temperatures and humidity, which can be intensified by physical exertion, overwhelms the body’s ability to cool itself. Cases range from mild, like benign heat rashes in infants, to more serious, when the body’s core temperature increases. That can lead to life-threatening instances of heatstroke, diagnosed once the body temperature rises above 104 degrees, potentially causing organ failure.

Prevention is key. Experts emphasize that drinking plenty of water, avoiding the outdoors during the hot midday and afternoon hours, and taking it slow when adjusting to exercise are the most effective ways to avoid getting sick.

Children’s bodies take longer to increase sweat production and otherwise acclimatize in a warm environment than adults’ do, research shows. Young kids are also more susceptible to dehydration because a larger percentage of their body weight is water.

Infants and younger children also have more trouble regulating their body temperature, in part because they often don’t recognize when they should drink more water or remove clothing to cool down. A 1995 study showed that young children who spent 30 minutes in a 95-degree room saw their core temperatures rise significantly higher and faster than their mothers’ — even though they sweat more than adults do relative to their size.

Pediatricians advise caretakers to monitor how much water children consume and encourage them to drink before they ask for it. Thirst indicates the body is already dehydrated.

They should also dress kids in light-colored, lightweight clothes; limit outdoor time during the hottest hours; and look for ways to cool down, such as by visiting an air-conditioned place like a library, taking a cool bath, or going for a swim.

To address the risks to student athletes, the National Athletic Trainers’ Association recommends that high school athletes acclimatize by gradually building their activity over the course of two weeks when returning to their sport for a new season — including by slowly stepping up the amount of any protective equipment they wear.

“You’re gradually increasing that intensity over a week to two weeks so your body can get used to the heat,” said Kathy Dieringer, president of NATA.

Warning Signs and Solutions

Experts note a flushed face, fatigue, muscle cramps, headache, dizziness, vomiting, and a lot of sweating are among the symptoms of heat exhaustion, which can develop into heatstroke if untreated. Call a doctor if symptoms worsen, such as if the child seems disoriented or cannot drink.

Taking immediate steps to cool a child experiencing heat exhaustion or heatstroke is critical. The child should be taken to a shaded or cool area; be given cool fluids with salt, like sports drinks; and have any sweaty or heavy garments removed.

For adolescents, being submerged in an ice bath is the most effective way to cool the body, while younger children can be wrapped in cold, wet towels or misted with lukewarm water and placed in front of a fan.

Although children’s deaths in parked cars have been well documented, the tragic incidents continue to occur. According to federal statistics, 23 children died of vehicular heatstroke in 2021. Null, who collects his own data, said 13 children have died so far this year.

Caretakers should never leave children alone in a parked car, Null said. Take steps to prevent young children from entering the car themselves and becoming trapped, including locking the car while it’s parked at home.

More than half of cases of vehicular pediatric heatstroke occur because a caretaker accidentally left a child behind, he said. While in-car technology reminding adults to check their back seats has become more common, only a fraction of vehicles have it, requiring parents to come up with their own methods, like leaving a stuffed animal in the front seat.

The good news, Null said, is that simple behavioral changes can protect kids. “This is preventable in 100% of the cases,” he said.

A Lopsided Risk

Bernstein leads Harvard’s Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, which works with front-line health clinics to help their predominantly low-income patients respond to the health impacts of climate change. Federally backed clinics alone provide care to about 30 million Americans, including many children, he said.

Bernstein recently led a nationwide study that found that from May through September, days with higher temperatures are associated with more visits to children’s hospital emergency rooms. Many visits were more directly linked to heat, although the study also pointed to how high temperatures can exacerbate existing health conditions like neurological disorders.

“Children are more vulnerable to climate change through how these climate shocks reshape the world in which they grow up,” Bernstein said.

Helping people better understand the health risks of extreme heat and how to protect themselves and their families are among the public health system’s major challenges, experts said.

The National Weather Service’s heat alert system is mainly based on the heat index, a measure of how hot it feels when relative humidity is factored in with air temperature. But the alerts are not related to effects on health, said Kathy Baughman McLeod, director of the Adrienne Arsht-Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center.

By the time temperatures rise to the level that a weather alert is issued, many vulnerable people — like children, pregnant women, and the elderly — may already be experiencing heat exhaustion or heatstroke. The center developed a new heat alert system, which is being tested in Seville, Spain, historically one of the hottest cities in Europe.

The system marries metrics like air temperature and humidity with public health data to categorize heat waves and, when they are serious enough, give them names — making it easier for people to understand heat as an environmental threat that requires prevention measures.

The categories are determined through a metric known as excess deaths, which compares how many people died on a day with the forecasted temperature versus an average day. That may help health officials understand how severe a heat wave is expected to be and make informed recommendations to the public based on risk factors like age or medical history.

The health-based alert system would also allow officials to target caretakers of children and seniors through school systems, preschools, and senior centers, Baughman McLeod said.

Giving people better ways to conceptualize heat is critical, she said.

“It’s not dramatic. It doesn’t rip the roof off of your house,” Baughman McLeod said. “It’s silent and invisible.”

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Along with Polling and Policy Analysis, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at the Kaiser Family Foundation. KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues.

Monday, June 13, 2022

State Labor Cabinet reminds employers to protect employees as heat indexes hit triple digits and a hot workweek is forecast

CDC photo
As heat indexes went well into the triple digits Monday and weather forecasts predicted a hot workweek, the state Labor Cabinet reminded employers to protect employees working in hot conditions.

Labor Secretary Jamie Link urged employers to "establish a heat illness prevention plan, closely monitor workers in hot indoor and outdoor environments, and learn how to recognize and treat various heat-related illnesses," a cabinet press release said.

“Employers are responsible for providing safe workplaces free of known hazards, and that includes extreme heat conditions,” Link said in the release. “Asking workers to perform physically exhausting work in dangerously hot conditions without providing breaks, water and shade can result in serious illness and even death.”

The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration recommends regular water, rest and shade breaks for those working in hot environments, outdoors or indoors. OSHA and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health have free mobile application for Android and iPhone users that provides real-time heat index information and hourly forecasts by location, as well as occupational safety guidance and health recommendations. The tool can be found on Google Play and in Apple’s App Store.

Kentucky's program provides free, confidential heat exposure assessments by request, and offers a Heat Stress Awareness training module on its website. The cabinet is offering a class on heat stress during a population center training event June 21-24 in Frankfort.

Thursday, July 12, 2018

'Stay cool, stay hydrated and stay informed' to avoid heat-related illnesses in summer, which CDC says kill over 600 a year

Summer is a time to head outdoors and enjoy the hot weather, but it's important to remember that those warm days we love so much can also be dangerous, especially for older people.

More than 600 people a year die from heat-related illnesses, and most of them are seniors, the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.

The CDC says most of those deaths and heat-related illnesses are preventable if you "take measures to stay cool, remain hydrated and stay informed."

Heat-related illnesses happen when the body isn't able to properly cool itself, and can range from milder conditions (fainting, dizziness, heat rashes and cramps) to heat exhaustion. The most serious heat-related illness is heat stroke.

The CDC says one of the main things that affects a person's ability to cool down during hot weather is high humidity. When the humidity is high, sweat doesn't evaporate as quickly as it normally does, and it's the evaporation that keeps us cool.

Other factors that put a person at risk of heat-related illnesses are age, obesity, fever, dehydration, heart disease, mental illness, poor circulation, sunburn, and prescription drug and alcohol use.

Older adults, the very young, and people with mental illness and chronic diseases are at the highest risk, which are often groups that depend on others for their care.

The National Institutes of Health adds that seniors are particularly at risk for heat-related illnesses because they often have age-related changes their skin, such as poor blood circulation and inefficient sweat glands. In addition, seniors with heart, lung and kidney diseases are at increased risk, as are those with high blood pressure. NIH also notes that seniors who take diuretics, sedatives and tranquilizers, as well as multiple medications are at increased risk of getting a heat-related illnesses.

The CDC suggests checking on people in high-risk groups at least twice a day when it's hot outside, and to make sure you ask these four questions: Are they drinking enough water? Do they have access to air conditioning? Do they know how to keep cool? and Do they show any signs of heat stress?

The most common signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion are excessive sweating; cold, pale and clammy skin; a fast, but weak pulse; nausea or vomiting; muscle cramps; tiredness or weakness; dizziness, headache and fainting.

The signs and symptoms of heat stroke -- which requires immediate medical attention -- are high body temperature (103 degrees Fahrenheit or higher); hot red, dry or damp skin; a fast, strong pulse; headache, dizziness, nausea, confusion, and passing out.

The CDC offers tips for everyone to follow to avoid heat-related death or illness, as well as some just for seniors and those in those high risk groups.

Tips for everyone:
  • Stay in air-conditioned locations as much as possible
  • Limit outdoor activity, especially during midday when the sun is hottest
  • Pace activity, start slow and gradually pick up the pace
  • Drink more water than usual, and don't wait until you are thirsty to drink
  • Wear loose, lightweight, light-colored clothing
  • Take cool showers or baths to cool down
  • Wear and reapply sunscreen as needed
  • Check the local news for health and safety updates
Additional tips for those most at risk:
  • If you don't have air conditioning in your home, contact your local health department or locate an air-conditioned shelter in your area. Public facilities, like malls and libraries, are also available, as is the air-conditioning in vehicles.
  • Do not rely on a fan as your primary cooling device during an extreme heat event
  • If your doctor limits your fluids, or has you on water pills, ask them how much you should drink during hot weather.
  • Check on friends and neighbors, and have someone do the same for you
  • Don't use the stove or oven to cook, it only makes your house hotter.
  • Do not engage in very strenuous activities and get plenty of rest
It's also important to never leave children or pets in cars. As of July 3 in the U.S., 21 children had died of vehicular heatstroke this year, according to a KidsandCars.org.

Sunday, May 27, 2018

Children are at risk of death from being left in hot cars; health officials say don't do it in any circumstances, offer prevention tips

Image from Huffington Post
Every summer, children die from heat stroke because they are unintentionally left in a hot car, with the majority of these deaths occurring in children age 3 and under The latest reported victim was a 1-year-old girl in Nashville who was accidentally left inside a hot car May 23.

According to the safety organization Kids and Cars, 37 children a year die in hot cars. These include instances of children being forgotten, accidentally locking themselves in a car or trunk, or in a small number of cases, intentionally left in a car.

“Infants and small children are not able to regulate their body temperature in the same way that adults do,” Dr. Heather Felton, medical director of the University of Louisville Pediatrics - Sam Swope Kosair Charities Centre, said in a U of L news release. “Sweating won’t cool down an infant or young child in the same way that it does an adult, and children may not be able to extract themselves from a car seat or remove clothing to help their bodies adjust.”

A new study out of Arizona State University and the University of California San Diego School of Medicine, published in the science journal Temperature, found that it takes about an hour for a child left in a hot car to suffer heatstroke, an average of 80 minutes in a sunny car to kill a child, and a little under two hours for a 2-year-old's body to reach a core temperature of greater than 104 degrees Fahrenheit, a degree from which a body cannot cool down," Dr. Sima Patel reports for ABC News. Patel notes that in reality, different children reach hyperthermia at different times, based on the climate, child's size, clothing, ethnicity and age.

"I don’t think our study can address the overall ‘risk’ of heatstroke because that depends on human behavior and actions more than anything," Jennifer Vanos, lead study author told ABC.  "All cars heat up to lethal temperatures across every state, and although it’s the level of heat that in the end causes the death, it’s the act of forgetfulness that is the trigger. Deaths have occurred in not-so-hot states as well. And even though parking in the shade decrease the heart rate of the child’s core temperature, the risk of death is likely the same as if parking in the sun."

Felton offers these American Academy of Pediatrics-endorsed tips for parents when traveling in a car with infants or young children:
  • The inside of a car can reach dangerous temperatures quickly, even when the outside temperature is not hot. Never leave a child alone in a car, even if you expect to come back soon.
  • Always check the back seat to make sure all children are out of the car when you arrive at your destination. 
  • Avoid distractions while driving, especially cell phone use.
  • Be especially aware of kids in the car when there is a change from the routine such as someone else is driving them in the morning, or you take a different route to work or child care. 
  • Have your childcare provider call if your child has not arrived within 10 minutes of the expected arrival time.
  • Place your cell phone, bag or purse, or shoes in the back seat, so you are reminded to check the back seat when you arrive at your destination.
  •  Lock your car when it is parked so children cannot get in without supervision.
  • Drink plenty of water and have your children drink plenty of water when temperatures soar.
  • Plan for extra rest time – heat and a change from the normal routine leaves kids and parents feeling tired.

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Logan Co. schools work to keep kids and bus drivers hydrated during hot, humid days; here are tips for dealing with heat

With temperatures soaring into the high 90s and the heat index over 100, the new Logan County school superintendent made sure the students and bus drivers were well hydrated last week, O.J. Stapleton reports for the Russellville News Democrat & Leader.

Dr. Kevin Hub and other members of the central office staff delivered bottled water to all schools for students who would be riding buses in the extreme heat, Stapleton writes.

“I think it’s important to recognize that it’s hot and we do not have air conditioning on our school buses,” Hub told Stapleton. “That makes it hard on our drivers and students. This just falls under the category of ‘a good thing to do’ when it comes to taking care of our students and staff.” He said the gesture was appreciated by both the staff and students.

Signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, are heavy sweating; weakness; cold pale clammy skin; fast, weak pulse; nausea or vomiting; and fainting. The CDC suggests that if someone has these symptoms they should be moved to a cooler location, lie down and loosen their clothing, apply wet, cool cloths to as much of the body as possible, be offered sips of water and seek medical attention immediately vomiting occurs and continues.

The CDC reports the signs and symptoms of heat stroke, a much more serious condition, as: body temperatures above 103 degree Fahrenheit; hot, red, dry or moist skin; rapid and strong pulse; and possible unconsciousness. These symptoms require immediate medical attention. Call 911 immediately, move the person to a cooler environment, reduce the person's body temperature with cool cloths or even a bath and do NOT give fluids.

Prevention is the best way to avoid these heat-related illnesses, Stapleton reports. He offers some suggestions below on how to protect yourself during these extreme temperatures.

Here are some suggestions to prevent heat stroke:
  • Drink more fluids, regardless of your activity level.
  • Avoid alcoholic beverages and high-sugar beverages as they can cause you to lose more body fluid.
  • Don't wait until you are thirsty to drink.
  • Seek the advice of your doctor if you have fluid restrictions or are on water pills.
  • Avoid very cold drinks as they can cause stomach cramps.
  • Stay indoors in an air-conditioned place if possible.
  • Go to the mall or the library for some air-conditioned relief if you do not have home access.
  • Seek a heat-relief shelter in your area. Contact your local health department for information.
  • Fans do not prevent heat-related illness when the temperatures are in the high 90s.
  • Take a cool shower or bath.
  • Wear lightweight, light-colored, loose-fitting clothes.
  • NEVER leave anyone in a closed, parked vehicle.
Every person is at risk of heat-related illnesses in these extreme temperatures, but some people are at greater risk and need to be checked on regularly, Stapleton writes. High risk adults should be checked on at least twice daily and monitored for signs of heat exhaustion or heat stroke. Infants and children need more frequent watching.

Those at high risk of heat-related illness are:
  • Infants and young children
  • People aged 65 or older
  • People who are ill, especially with heart disease or high blood pressure.
Some advice for being outdoors in the heat:
  • Limit your outdoor activities to the morning and evening hours.
  • Minimize your outdoor exercise.
  • Drink two to four glasses of cool, non-alcoholic fluids each hour if you exercise.
  • Drink sports beverages to replace the salt and minerals you lose in sweat. Consult your doctor about the use of sports drinks if you are on a low-salt diet.
  • Rest often in shady areas.
  • Wear a wide-brimmed hat, sunglasses, and sunscreen.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Tips to keep children safe from the dangers of summer heat

While enjoying time with family on the boat, at church picnics, in the backyard or at the beach, be sure to keep kids safe during the summer heat.

Heat can trigger three major illnesses, says Dr. Eric Kirkendall of Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. “Heat stroke, heat exhaustion and heat cramps are reactions caused by exposure to high temperatures combined with high humidity.”

The most serious reaction is heatstroke, which is a life-threatening emergency that should be treated immediately by parents and then by medical professionals. Symptoms can include hot, flushed skin, high fevers (over 104° F), confusion, and even seizures.

If you notice signs of heatstroke, call 911 immediately, cool off the child as quickly as possible by sponging the entire body with cool water, elevate feet to counteract shock and have the child drink cool, not cold water, while waiting for Emergency Medical Services to arrive, said Kirkendall. Do the same if treating the child for heat exhaustion, although it is not necessary to call 911 or a physician unless symptoms continue.

Heat exhaustion is less severe, but also requires medical attention. Symptoms include lots of sweating, nausea, dizziness, fainting or weakness. Heat cramps occur mostly in the child's abdomen and legs, especially the calf or thigh muscles, but symptoms do not include a fever.

Parents can take many steps to keep children safe by keeping them hydrated with water, limiting their time outside during extremely hot weather and encouraging inside breaks when they do play outside, said Kirkendall. Click here for more information.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Never leave kids in a hot car, officials say in press conference planned even before Louisville toddler died

Following a 2-year-old Louisville boy's death from hyperthermia after he was left alone in a hot car Saturday, health officials warned of the dangers of vehicle-related heat stroke at a news conference in Frankfort yesterday.

"The loss of a child due to hyperthermia is a horrific tragedy that, sadly, we are seeing every year in this state," said Dr. Susan Pollack, coordinator for Kentucky's Safe Kids Coalition.

According to the group, one of 600 such coalitions and chapters around the country, two other child vehicular deaths — one in Texas, another in Louisiana — have already happened this year. Last year was the worst on record with 49 deaths nationwide. There have been 494 deaths in the country from 1998 to 2010, 13 of which happened in Kentucky.

About half the deaths occur when a parent forgets their child is in the car and leaves. "Something in a caregiver's daily routine changes, and the caregiver forgets to drop off the child at day care or with another caregiver and leaves the child in the car," Beth Musgrave of the Lexington Herald-Leader reports. As such, Safe Kids recommends setting a cell phone alarm to remind parents or placing a purse or cell phone near the child to act as a similar memory prompt.

In some cases, parents know they've left their child in the car, but do not realize how hot the car can get. "If you crack the windows, it doesn't make it cooler," Pollack said. One study found the temperature in a vehicle can rise 20 degrees in 10 minutes during warm weather. Moreover, a child's body temperature rises three to five times faster than adults.

About 30 percent of related deaths happen when a child is playing in a car and becomes trapped inside. Safe Kids recommends always locking a vehicle to prevent kids from getting in.

The news conference was planned before the death of 2-year-old Kenton Brown, Musgrave reports. Anyone who intentionally leaves a child in a hot car can face manslaughter charges if the child is younger than 8, Kentucky State Police Lt. David Jude said. (Read more)