Submitted by the Madison County Department of Health
Take care as the weather heats up. Extreme heat can affect your health, the health of your neighbors and even pets. Madison County Health Department recommends the following steps to prevent a heat-related illness, especially during extreme heat that lasts several days:
Stay cool
- Stay in the shade as much as possible when you are outside.
- Wear lightweight, light colored clothing.
- Take a cool shower, bath, or apply a towel with cool water to your neck to cool down.
- Keep shades and curtains in your home closed while indoors.
- During a heat spell, don’t reply only on a fan to keep you cool; go to an air conditioned place like a mall or public building to cool off at least for a few hours a day.
Stay hydrated
- Remind your family to drink water throughout the day and don’t wait until you are thirsty to drink.
- If working or playing outside, drink 2-4 cups of cool, nonalcoholic and caffeine-free liquids an hour to help keep your body temperature normal and avoid dehydration.
- Avoid working or playing outside during the hottest part of the day (11 a.m. to 4 p.m.).
Tune in
- Know the weather forecast in your area, check for heat alerts when planning outdoor play, work, and chores.
- Keep kids out of hot cars.
- Recognize the symptoms of heat-related illness. Dehydration starts with thirst and progresses to cold clammy skin, dizziness, nausea, and muscle cramps. Heat stroke is a life threatening emergency with symptoms of hot, dry skin, confusion, seizures, and loss of consciousness. Cal 911 immediately if you thinning someone is having a heat stroke.
Residents needing financial assistance this summer to get cool may be eligible for the HEAP Cooling Assistance Benefit, call HEAP at 1-800-342-3009 or go to otda.ny.gov/programs/heap/#cooling-assistance.
Find more extreme heat advice at health.ny.gov/extremeheat.