Community Corner

Heat Advisories Stem From Hundreds of 1995 Chicago Heat Deaths

During that summer, between 500 and 700 people died from excessive heat. Most were male, elderly or ill and lived alone.

On Thursday, temperatures are forecasted to boil at 94 degrees Fahrenheit in Winnetka, Glencoe and Northfield.

In this very hot week, you've probably heard several advisories reminding you to check on elderly and ill neighbors.

They're a legacy of the week of July 14 to 20, 1995, when Chicago temperatures rose to 106 degrees, with heat indexes of 120. During that week, somewhere between 465 to 739 people died in the city, depending on whose criteria you use. 

Find out what's happening in Winnetka-Glencoewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Author Eric Klinenberg did in-depth analysis of who died, and in his book, Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago, found most were elderly, and often ill. They were socially isolated, typically did not get out of the house much, tended to be lower-income and of course, did not have air conditioners.

Klinenberg makes the point that social isolation with a big cause, by noting that twice as many men died as women, whom sociologists say are better at maintaining social relationships. Also, while Latinos made up 25 percent of Chicago's population in 1995, they only accounted for 2 percent of those who died from the heat--a fact Klinenberg attributes to the close family and neighborhood relationships in Latino neighborhoods.

Find out what's happening in Winnetka-Glencoewith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The ratio of African American deaths to white deaths was 1.5 to 1, which Klinenberg attributes to the fact that many elderly African-Americans lived in declining neighborhoods without networks of neighbors who knew each other. 

Partly because of disasters like July 1995, public health experts now recite advisories to stay in air-conditioned rooms, go to cooling centers, stay hydrated and check on the elderly and ill-especially the socially isolated. Physicians and others say it's the only way to keep heat from turning deadly. 


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