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Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Spikes in emergency room visits found for respiratory problems in the days before a thunderstorm

A team of researchers from the University of Oregon, Harvard Medical School, and the University of Illinois has found evidence of an increase in the number of people going to the emergency room for respiratory problems in the days before a thunderstorm. In their paper published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, the group describes their study of Medicare data and thunderstorms and what they learned from it.

Over the past several decades, there has been anecdotal evidence of spikes in emergency room visits for patients with respiratory complaints in the days leading up to major thunderstorms. It was first described in 1983 in England and then twice again in Australia in 1987 and 2016. At that time, scientists had no explanation for the spikes, though they suspected that it was linked to an increase in pollen in the air. In this new effort, the researchers looked at Medicare data describing emergency room visits for people over 65 with respiratory problems over the years 1999 to 2012, and compared it with atmospheric conditions for those involved.

The researchers found that there were, indeed, spikes inemergency room visits by people with respiratory problemssuch as COPD or asthma prior to thunderstorms. They also extrapolated the data to make estimates for the U.S. as a whole, suggesting that there were approximately 52,000 extra ER visits due to approaching thunderstorms for people over 65 with respiratory ailments over the time period they studied.

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10 comments:

  1. Who in their right mind would believe ANYTHING coming out of these libutard school's?? They lie and put out misinfomation CONSTANTLY.

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  2. many of us can predict rain before it comes. We can feel the pressure systems. We get headaches prior to them getting here. so its possible that the respiratory problems that are mentioned could be true.

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    Replies
    1. It’s true I can tell when bad weather is coming... you might be able as well if you pull your pin head from your arse

      Delete
  3. Their research (costs millions) and leads to no actionable information. Can I have their job?

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    Replies
    1. Trump 2020 and we do not like Goofy Susan OlsenAugust 18, 2020 at 7:04 PM

      644

      we love our taxes being wasted like this

      don't think you want the quiet ones in America mad at you too

      This wasteful spending is going to be dealt with

      Japan found that out when they hit Pearl Harbor


      the quiet ones woke up

      Delete
  4. I always get an uncontrollable urge to go to Florida days before a snow storm.

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  5. Duh! It is hard to breathe humid air.

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  6. This is a blatent attempt to sew the seeds for the need of regulating PM 2.5

    Obama's EPA used false science and illegal studies to try and regulate PM 2.5 and Trump undid it.

    Soon this study will conclude that dust in the air from dry soil is the cause of respiratory distress and we will need to clamp down on farmers.

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  7. Like climate change. All high dollar words that mean nothing more than BULLSHIT.

    ReplyDelete

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