Californians are staring down an unusually long and dangerous heat wave. Public health officials are opening cooling centers and urging caution as folks head out to celebrate the Fourth of July in what the National Weather Service says could be several days of 110-degree temperatures.
There’s no question that kind of heat is hazardous to your health. But why?
What happens to our bodies when we get too hot? And what can we do to stay safe?
As the forecast came into focus this week, we caught up with Tarik Benmarhnia, an environmental epidemiologist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego. He studies the many ways that climate affects our health, what makes some people more vulnerable to climate hazards than others, and what communities and officials can do to prepare and protect people.
University of California: What’s happening inside our bodies on a hot day?
Tarik Benmarhnia: There’s a region of the brain called the hypothalamus, and one of its functions is to act as our internal thermometer. When the hypothalamus senses higher temperatures, it triggers a bunch of different processes to try to cool the body down. The main one is to send as much blood toward your skin as possible for evapotranspiration. Through this process, some of the water in your blood gets turned into sweat, which also helps conduct heat away from your body. That’s also to carry heat toward the surface so it can radiate away more easily.