July 7 (Reuters) - The World āHealth Organization warned on Tuesday that Europe could āface āmore deadly weeksā ahead, with another intense heatwave forming over the Atlantic.Ā
Here are more ā details:Ā
⢠Temperatures in Portugal and southern Spain are expected to climb to 43 degrees Celsius (109 degrees Fahrenheit) in the coming days.
⢠WHO āRegional Director for Europe Hans Kluge held an emergency call on Monday with representatives āfrom 41 countries in the region, the European Commission and civil society groups to discuss lessons from the recent heatwave and preparations for the ā next one.
⢠Kluge said in a statement that countries ā with heat-health action plans in place responded more quickly and better protected their populations during the June heatwave.
⢠However, he said that less than half of WHO's European member states had such a plan āin place.
⢠Experts have said the June 20-28 heatwave was the most ā severe recorded in Europe, causing disruption to āpower generation, damaging infrastructure and overwhelming healthcare systems.
⢠āThe extreme heat was almost certainly driven by climate change, scientists said.
⢠France, the Netherlands and Belgium recorded 3,700 excess deaths, with āauthorities warning that the numbers are preliminary and ācould rise.
⢠Temperatures hit 40 ā degrees Celsius in parts of Europe during the heatwave.
⢠āKluge said care home residents, homeless ā people and socially isolated older adults were still not being reached consistently across Europe.
⢠"The work now is on two fronts: fixing what failed in ārecent weeks before the ānext heatwave hits and building the kind of health systems that donāt ā just respond to extreme heat ābut are ready for it," Kluge said.
(Reporting by Shubham Kalia in āBengaluru; Editing by Ros Russell)




