Thousands of Delayed Hurricane Deaths: Toll far Greater than Official Counts

Thousands of Delayed Hurricane Deaths: Toll far Greater than Official Counts

13% of Floridian Deaths can be attributed to hurricanes and tropical storms? Recent research from both South Korea and the United States reveals a significant and largely underestimated public health burden associated with tropical cyclones (hurricanes/typhoons). Beyond the immediate, direct deaths typically reported, these studies demonstrate a substantial "excess mortality" that can persist for weeks, months, and even years after a storm. This hidden death toll disproportionately affects vulnerable populations, including the elderly, those with lower socioeconomic status, and racial/ethnic minorities. The findings highlight the critical need for expanded public health preparedness and policy measures that account for the long-term, indirect impacts of these increasingly intense natural disasters.

  1. Significant and Underestimated Excess Mortality:
  • Beyond Direct Deaths: Official government statistics typically focus on immediate, direct deaths (e.g., drowning, trauma). However, studies show that the true mortality burden is far greater due to indirect causes.
  • "The true mortality burden related to cyclone exposure may exceed officially reported death tolls, which usually focus on direct injury-related deaths." (Han et al., Korea)
  • "Official government statistics record only the number of individuals killed during these storms... Usually, these direct deaths, which average 24 per storm in official estimates, occur through drowning or some other type of trauma. But the new analysis... reveals a larger, hidden death toll in hurricanes’ aftermath." (Young & Hsiang, US - Stanford)
  • Quantitative Estimates:South Korea: An average of 150 excess all-cause deaths were estimated for each tropical cyclone during the 2 weeks post-exposure between 2002 and 2023. Daily average increases were 0.084 in all-cause mortality and 0.075 in non-accidental mortality in cyclone-exposed regions.
  • United States (Short-Term): For 179 tropical cyclones between 1988–2019, there were 3,112 excess deaths after hurricane-force winds and 15,590 excess deaths after gale to violent storm-force winds in counties with >95% probability of excess deaths. Hurricane Katrina in 2005 was the deadliest, with 1,491 excess deaths.
  • United States (Long-Term): A groundbreaking analysis of 501 tropical cyclones from 1930–2015 estimates that an average U.S. tropical cyclone indirectly causes 7,000 to 11,000 excess deaths, persisting for nearly 15 years after the storm. Total estimated deaths since 1930 range from 3.6 million to 5.2 million nationwide, vastly exceeding the official total of ~10,000 direct deaths.
  • "A big storm will hit, and there’s all these cascades of effects where cities are rebuilding or households are displaced or social networks are broken. These cascades have serious consequences for public health." (Solomon Hsiang, US - Stanford)
  • "This burden is 300–480 times greater than government (NOAA) estimates of 24 deaths per storm on average (22 without Hurricane Katrina) and 11,937 total TC deaths during 1950–2015." (Young & Hsiang, US - Nature)

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(234)

When Politics Turns on Science Globally

When Politics Turns on Science Globally

Weather scientists are increasingly being ignored, censored, arrested, or pushed aside by political movements around the world. From NOAA staffing cuts in the United States to jailed earthquake scient...

15 Touko 45min

2026 Weather Shock: Super El Niño, Record Heat, and a Planet Running Hot

2026 Weather Shock: Super El Niño, Record Heat, and a Planet Running Hot

A Super El Niño may be forming for 2026, and it could push global heat, extreme weather, flooding, drought, and hurricane impacts into dangerous new territory.A Super El Niño may be forming for 2026, ...

8 Touko 33min

AI Weather Forecasts Are Getting Smarter. So Why Are We Weakening NOAA?

AI Weather Forecasts Are Getting Smarter. So Why Are We Weakening NOAA?

AI is revolutionizing weather forecasting. New models like Google DeepMind’s GraphCast and GenCast, ECMWF’s AIFS, and NOAA’s experimental AI-GEFS are producing faster, cheaper, and increasingly accura...

5 Touko 42min

AI Just Beat Hurricane Forecasting… Should We Be Worried?

AI Just Beat Hurricane Forecasting… Should We Be Worried?

AI just changed hurricane forecasting forever. In 2025, it outperformed traditional models and even challenged official NHC forecasts. Artificial Intelligence is no longer experimental in meteorology ...

21 Huhti 53min

Will Hurricane Forecasts Get Worse? Inside the NOAA Budget Cuts

Will Hurricane Forecasts Get Worse? Inside the NOAA Budget Cuts

Could hurricane forecasts actually get worse? A deep dive into the proposed 2027 budget cuts to NOAA and how eliminating key research could impact storm prediction, safety, and future forecast accurac...

13 Huhti 32min

Fired, Sued, and Still Forecasting: The Matt Devitt vs WINK News Battle

Fired, Sued, and Still Forecasting: The Matt Devitt vs WINK News Battle

Fired. Sued. And still forecasting.The sudden termination of longtime Southwest Florida meteorologist Matt Devitt has exploded into one of the most fascinating media and legal battles in recent years....

4 Huhti 37min

“It Only Takes One”: Why 2026’s Hurricane Season Could Be Worse Than It Looks

“It Only Takes One”: Why 2026’s Hurricane Season Could Be Worse Than It Looks

The 2026 hurricane season warning nobody is talking about. The numbers may be average but the risk is anything but because “It only takes one”.The 2026 Atlantic hurricane season may look average on pa...

28 Maalis 40min

This Should NOT Be Happening in March… 112° Heat + Hawaii Flood Disaster

This Should NOT Be Happening in March… 112° Heat + Hawaii Flood Disaster

In this episode of Meteorology Matters, we break down two extreme and highly unusual weather events happening right now:🔥 Record-shattering March heat reaching 112°F🌊 Dangerous flooding impacting pa...

21 Maalis 38min

Suosittua kategoriassa Politiikka ja uutiset

uutiscast
aikalisa
politiikan-puskaradio
ootsa-kuullut-tasta-2
viisupodi
rss-ootsa-kuullut-tasta
tervo-halme
rss-vaalirankkurit-podcast
the-ulkopolitist
rss-podme-livebox
rss-asiastudio
rss-pinnalla
otetaan-yhdet
et-sa-noin-voi-sanoo-esittaa
aihe
rss-ulkopoditiikkaa
rikosmyytit
yksilla-raahessa-podcast
rss-sanna-ukkola-show-verkkouutiset
rss-girls-finish-f1rst