Extreme Heat

Keep yourself and your neighbours safe during extreme heat events

Our summers are getting hotter with more extremely hot days due to climate change. When extreme temperatures are forecasted, ensuring your body is able to cool down is critical.

Are you prepared for when the temperature rises? Here are tips for how you can protect yourself and those around you:

Symptoms of extreme weather-related illness

The symptoms of extreme weather-related illness can range from mild to severe. They include:

  • Heavy sweating
  • Muscle cramps
  • Rash
  • Swelling, especially hands and feet
  • Fatigue and weakness, light-headedness
  • Confused thinking
  • Headache
  • Nausea and/or vomiting
  • Hypothermia (cold)
  • Frostbite (cold)

 

 

How to cool yourself down

  • Drink plenty of cold drinks, and avoid excess alcohol, caffeine, and hot drinks.
  • Eat cold foods, particularly salads and fruit with a high-water content. Bananas, orange juice and occasional salty snacks can also help replace salts lost due to sweating.
  • Take a cool shower or bath
  • Mist water over the skin or clothing or keep a damp cloth on the back of your neck.
  • Heat stroke is a medical emergency

Call 911 or your local emergency number immediately if you or someone you’re caring for has a high body temperature and is unconscious, confused, or has stopped sweating.

Extreme heat can put your health at risk. It is important to take steps to protect yourself and your family. While extreme heat can put everyone at risk from heat illnesses, health risks are greatest for:

  • Older adults
  • Infants and young children
  • People with chronic illnesses (like breathing problems, mental illness, and heart problems) 
  • People who work in the heat
  • People who exercise in the heat
  • Pets

If you’re experiencing symptoms, such as rapid breathing and heartbeat, extreme thirst, and decreased urination with unusually dark yellow urine, take immediate steps to cool down and seek emergency care.

  • Get medical attention or call 911
  • Submerge yourself or the person you’re helping in cool water
  • Remove clothes and apply wet cloths


Heat stroke is an emergency.
Call 911 if you are caring for someone who displays symptoms, then take immediate action to cool them down while waiting for help to arrive.