Many of these young adults were exercising and the main causes of heat illnesses were exertional. PHOTO ST FILE
SINGAPORE – When Professor Marcus Ong, a senior consultant at Singapore General Hospital (SGH), looked into patient records from 2008 to 2020 to learn more about the characteristics and trends of heat-related injuries in Singapore, the findings surprised him.
He was expecting the bulk of the more than 400 patients to be seniors or children, who are particularly vulnerable to heat strain. Instead, two-thirds of the patients were young adults, mostly male, between the ages of 18 and 39.
Many of these young adults were exercising, and the main causes of heat illnesses were exertional. A number of them could be outdoor workers too, added Prof Ong, who is also director of Duke-NUS Medical School’s Health Services and Systems Research programme.
Moreover, more than 200 of the cases happened on Sundays and in December, which is one of the cooler months in Singapore.
He explained that heat strain is driven not just by weather, but also by a person’s attire and activity. Singapore is also highly humid all year round, which affects thermal comfort.
Prof Ong presented these findings at a climate change and heat health seminar at Duke-NUS Medical School on Jan 26. The study was conducted in 2023.
There is little clinical data on the number and prevalence of heat-related illnesses here, he said.
With the help of data scientists at Duke-NUS, he uncovered 426 patients between 2008 and 2020 who had been rushed to SGH’s emergency department with illnesses such as heatstroke, heat exhaustion and heat cramps. This is about 25 to 40 cases a year.
“We realised that there were a lot of major sports events that happen in December – marathons and even outdoor concerts,” Prof Ong said.
Prof Ong, who has helped provide medical support at marathons and mass runs, said he has seen a few participants running in onesies and character costumes, instead of proper exercise attire.
“That’s really crazy. It’s fun, but you can imagine, you feel hot just wearing a suit. Then you try to run in it.”
People may also have the tendency to underestimate their risk to heat illnesses in cool and wet weather, he added.
Slightly more than half of the 426 cases were Singapore residents, and the rest foreigners who were likely not acclimatised to the weather here.
Prof Ong recalled an Australian man who joined a local marathon the morning after landing in Singapore.
“He didn’t make it to the halfway mark and after 10km, he collapsed. He was taken to the hospital for heatstroke. It was quite bad. He was confused and drowsy. We had to send him to the ICU and intubate him.”
Prof Ong added that 14 per cent of the 426 patients were sent to the intensive care unit and two patients, both seniors, died.
Heat illnesses can be prevented and treated when addressed promptly without delays, he said. Addressing healthcare professionals at the seminar, he noted that there is a tendency to misdiagnose patients who are suffering from heat injuries, and that can be fatal.
He cited full-time national serviceman (NSF) Dave Lee, 19, who died of heatstroke in 2018. The NSF was evacuated to a medical centre about 40 minutes after he was seen to be suffering from signs of heat injury. Corporal First Class Lee’s supervising officer had even initially asked for a ground sheet to cover the late NSF as his arm was cold.
Prof Ong noted that a patient’s core body temperature, instead of skin temperature, should be measured to diagnose heat-related illnesses. Seizures are also a complication of heatstroke, which can be misdiagnosed as epilepsy.
Before Prof Ong embarked on this study with his Duke-NUS colleagues, there were only two published epidemiological reports about heat illnesses in Singapore. One is more than a decade old, and the other is specific to the military.
While data from SGH shows that younger adults are more at risk of heat illnesses, this trend could change as Singapore faces rising temperatures amid climate change.
Prof Ong and his team are hoping to expand their clinical studies and build a registry of heat-related health cases by working with hospitals here.
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