https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_North_American_heat_waves
Resolves YES if 500 or more people die in American heat waves this year.
Otherwise resolves NO.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Western_North_America_heat_wave
Resolves yes; Wikipedia lists 569 dead in just Phoenix from the heat wave this year.
@SneakySly
How is the percentage not higher? Maricopa county is widely reported to have had 425 with 199 still under investigation. Pima county has 64 and Pinal county had 42 just in July. That's easily over 500 in just 3 Arizona counties
https://www.azfamily.com/2023/08/08/migrant-heat-related-deaths-are-up-year-over-year-pinal-county/
In 2004, 297 Americans died from excessive natural heat, the lowest number recorded in the last two decades. In 2018, 1,008 Americans died as a direct result of heat. But by 2021, the number of heat-related deaths increased to 1,600, a 59 percent increase from four years earlier and a 439 percent increase from 2004.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) actively tracks daily and weekly heat-related illnesses, and its provisional data shows that 1,714 people died in the United States in 2022 from "heat-related" causes.
And also the 2023 temperature is higher than the temperature in 2022.
it seems like there will be more people dying from heat waves.
@higherLEVELING Quite. The class of workers who are most at risk of heatstroke. Arguably other than farm workers.