ARCHIV - 26.07.2018, Hessen, Frankfurt/Main: ILLUSTRATION - Ein Thermometer an einer Hauswand klettert am Nachmittag in Richtung der 40-Grad-Marke. Hohe Sommertemperaturen haben einer Studie zufolge in den Jahren 2018 bis 2020 jeweils zu Tausenden hitzebedingter Sterbefälle in Deutschland geführt. (zu dpa «Studie: Tausende Hitzetote in Jahren 2018 bis 2020») Foto: Frank Rumpenhorst/dpa +++ dpa-Bildfunk +++

According to a study, high summer temperatures led to thousands of heat-related deaths in Germany between 2018 and 2020. For the first time since the beginning of the investigation period in 1992, excess mortality due to heat had occurred in three consecutive years, researchers from the Robert Koch Institute (RKI), the Federal Environment Agency (Uba) and the German Weather Service (DWD) wrote on Friday in the “Deutsches Ärzteblatt”. .

High temperatures can put a lot of strain on the cardiovascular system, among other things, and exacerbate existing symptoms such as respiratory diseases. Since heat is rarely recognized as the direct cause of death, the authors of the study used statistical methods for their analysis.

The effect was particularly strong four years ago, the second warmest summer since records began in 1881. “The year 2018 in particular, with an estimated number of around 8,700 heat-related deaths, is of a similar order of magnitude to the historical heat years of 1994 and 2003 (around 10,000 each deaths),” the researchers write.

In 2018 there was an unusually long heatwave in Germany, and remarkably high average weekly temperatures were also measured during this period. The researchers estimate 6,900 heat-related deaths in 2019 and 3,700 in 2020. No significantly increased heat-related mortality was determined for 2021.

According to the study, the influence of high temperatures on mortality has decreased slightly overall since 1992. This indicates a certain adaptation to the heat.

“It is conceivable, for example, to change individual behavior through increased awareness, such as wearing airy clothing, drinking enough fluids or going to shady or air-conditioned rooms.”