Extreme heat is cutting the time people can safely be active outdoors

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By Meghan RosenMarch 17, 2026 Health & Medicine Smartwatch data can be used to assess early diabetes risk By Elie DolginMarch 16, 2026 Climate Extreme heat is cutting the time people can safely be active outdoors By Nikk OgasaMarch 16, 2026 Life Life Animals Plants Ecosystems Paleontology Neuroscience Genetics Microbes Recent posts in Life Microbes How warming is shifting microbial worlds By Erin Garcia de Jesús5 hours ago Animals Sharks are ingesting drugs in the Bahamas By Joshua Rapp LearnMarch 18, 2026 Animals Platypus fur has a surprising feature seen only in bird feathers By Jude ColemanMarch 17, 2026 Earth Earth Agriculture Climate Oceans Environment Recent posts in Earth Microbes How warming is shifting microbial worlds By Erin Garcia de Jesús5 hours ago Earth To make a ‘Snowball Earth,’ sci-fi moves fast. Geology is far slower By Carolyn GramlingMarch 18, 2026 Climate City skylines influence cloud formation above them By Larissa G. 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BASIT ZARGAR/getty images By Nikk Ogasa March 16, 2026 at 10:30 am Share this:Share Share via email (Opens in new window) Email Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit Share on X (Opens in new window) X Print (Opens in new window) Print Listen to this article This is a human-written story voiced by AI. Got feedback? Take our survey . (See our AI policy here .) During hot weather, daily activities such as walking and gardening can become dangerous. Such obstructive heat has become much more common around the world, researchers report March 10 in Environmental Research: Health. Using global heat, humidity and demographic data, scientists found that sweltry conditions now limit light physical activity for adults ages 18 to 40 for about 50 hours a year, on average. That’s double what young adults faced from 1950 to 1979. Meanwhile, adults over 65 now experience an average of about 900 hours of activity-limiting conditions each year. That’s more than 10 percent of the year and 300 more hours than half a century ago. Sign up for our newsletter We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday. “We see substantial declines in the number of hours that older adults can safely do general tasks,” says human biometeorologist Jennifer Vanos of Arizona State University in Tempe. She and her team combined heat and humidity data from 1950 to 2024 with simulations of healthy, acclimatized adults’ ability to regulate body temperature in the shade, plus population and development information for nearly 200 countries. The researchers then identified when and where heat and humidity made it unsafe for adults of different ages to do moderate physical activities, or those more strenuous than walking to the market or sweeping a doorstep. “That’s not any way to live,” Vanos says. Hours to lost heat This map shows the number of hours per year during which sweltering conditions limited older adults in different countries to light physical activity, such as moderately paced walking or light to moderate housework. Older adults who performed more strenuous activity during these hours may have been at elevated risk of heat-related illnesses, such as heat stroke or even death. Toggle between the two time periods to see how exposure to obstructive heat changed for adults over 65 in nearly 200 countries over the last half-century. Use the search bar to zero in on a country of interest. Nearly 80 percent of the global population lives in places where heat and humidity severely limit activity for older adults during part of the year, the researchers found. Countries in South and Southeast Asia and the Middle East face the greatest annual exposure. Older adults in Thailand, for example, now face an average of nearly 2,200 hours of obstructive heat, up from about 1,600 hours during 1950 to 1979. In Qatar, older adults today experience more than 2,820 such hours per year, up from about 2,270 a half-century ago. Meanwhile, in the United States, older adults now face an average of about 270 hours each year of unsafe conditions, an increase of about 70 hours. However, those numbers can vary widely between communities, due to the country’s diverse environments. Even in developed countries such as the United States and Qatar, vulnerable groups — such as outdoor workers and people with comorbidities — may lack the resources to cope with the heat, Vanos says. “Their livability, their ability

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