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Climate change is deadly. Exactly how deadly?

Catastrophic flash floods killed dozens of people in eastern Kentucky in July 2022. Here, homes in Jackson, Ky., are flooded with water.
Arden S. Barnes
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The Washington Post via Getty Images
Catastrophic flash floods killed dozens of people in eastern Kentucky in July 2022. Here, homes in Jackson, Ky., are flooded with water.

No one in eastern Kentucky could remember rain as intense as what fell in July 2022. In just five days, more than 14 inches of rain inundated the region's rural counties. On the final day of the deluge, there was too much water for the ground to soak up any more. Flash floods tore through towns, washing away roads, homes and entire neighborhoods.

The floods were deadly. But how deadly, exactly? There are still multiple government death counts for an event that upended the lives of thousands of people. The state of Kentucky determined that 45 people died from the flooding. But the National Weather Service counted 40 deaths. And preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows only 36 people died.

The disparate death counts in Kentucky are part of a long-standing problem: Despite the growing danger from climate-driven disasters, there is no single, reliable count of who is dying as a result of extreme weather in the United States. For any given weather disaster, multiple government agencies publish independent — and often widely differing — death counts.

The definitive federal accounting of climate change's impacts in the United States, the National Climate Assessment, estimates that upward of 1,300 people die in the U.S. each year due to heat alone and that extreme floods, hurricanes and wildfires routinely kill hundreds more. But those numbers are rough estimates.

That's a problem, the federal government has long acknowledged, because who dies as a result of extreme weather, as well as how they die, is important. That public health information can help protect people from increasingly frequent disasters and can even spur policies that address the reliance on fossil fuels at the root of global warming. And inconsistency over which disaster-related deaths get counted can lead to frustration and even financial losses for the families of those who died.

"The data collection needs to be better," says Samantha Montano, a disaster researcher at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy. "There needs to be a national, publicly available database that everybody has access to that is tracking every single death."

Teresa Reynolds sits exhausted as her neighbors remove debris from their flood-ravaged homes in Hindman, Ky., in July 2022. The deadly floods were caused by torrential rains. Climate change makes such record-breaking rainstorms more common in much of the United States.
Timothy D. Easley / AP
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AP
Teresa Reynolds sits exhausted as her neighbors remove debris from their flood-ravaged homes in Hindman, Ky., in July 2022. The deadly floods were caused by torrential rains. Climate change makes such record-breaking rainstorms more common in much of the United States.

One disaster, multiple death counts

It's unclear how many people in the U.S. officially died in some of the most high-profile and deadly climate-related weather disasters in recent years.

The issue burst into public view after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico in 2017. The official death toll was in the dozens, but survivors and local officials on the ground questioned whether that was an accurate count, in part because reliable electricity wasn't restored on the island for months.

Epidemiologists stepped in and used statistics to compare the number of deaths in the months after the hurricane with the number of deaths during similar periods in previous years when there was no storm. They estimated that the actual death toll was likely much higher. "We went from the federal government saying 89 [people died] to another academic institution saying 2,000 and yet another saying 5,000," says Maureen Lichtveld, an epidemiologist at the University of Pittsburgh. Ultimately, the government of Puerto Rico reported an official death toll of just under 3,000.

Maximiliano Encarnacion uses a broom to push through floodwaters from Hurricane Maria in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 2017. The initial official death toll from the storm was in the dozens, but subsequent epidemiological analyses suggested that thousands of additional deaths had gone uncounted.
Marie D. De Jesus / Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
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Houston Chronicle via Getty Images
Maximiliano Encarnacion uses a broom to push through floodwaters from Hurricane Maria in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in 2017. The initial official death toll from the storm was in the dozens, but subsequent epidemiological analyses suggested that thousands of additional deaths had gone uncounted.

Lichtveld is one of the authors of a congressionally mandated 2020 report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine about disaster death tolls, written partly in response to public frustration after Hurricane Maria. That report called on the federal government to standardize how deaths are counted after weather disasters. "Significant confusion and disagreement persist," the report notes, "regarding what counts as a disaster-related death."

The CDC is the federal agency officially responsible for mortality statistics for the U.S., including weather-related fatalities. The agency declined to make any of its experts on disaster-related mortality available for an interview, but acknowledged that deaths from weather disasters are potentially being undercounted because of inconsistent information on death certificates, according to a CDC spokesperson who answered NPR questions on background via email.

The CDC says it does not have any estimates of how large the potential undercount might be for different types of disasters, and doesn't have plans to update its guidance for how local officials document disaster-related deaths.

The lack of reliable data is a problem, says Rep. Nydia Velázquez, D-N.Y., who sponsored the bill that led to the National Academies report, along with then-Sen. Kamala Harris. "Death tolls are important," Velázquez says. "They influence public perception about the scope of a disaster and often determine what federal resources are allocated in response."

Despite the congressional attention and the subsequent recommendations from the National Academies, little has changed. Disparities and confusion persist over official death tolls from climate-driven extreme weather.

Bob Richling carries Iris Darden through floodwater from Hurricane Florence in September 2018 in Spring Lake, North Carolina. Counting hurricane-related deaths can be complicated because sustained power outages can contribute to fatalities for weeks or even months after the storm passes.
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Getty Images
Bob Richling carries Iris Darden through floodwater from Hurricane Florence in September 2018 in Spring Lake, North Carolina. Counting hurricane-related deaths can be complicated because sustained power outages can contribute to fatalities for weeks or even months after the storm passes.

Hurricane Florence killed 45 people in North Carolina in 2018, according to the state's Department of Public Safety, but the National Hurricane Center reported 40 fatalities from the storm.

The death count disparities from heat waves are particularly large. Heat waves are by far the deadliest type of climate-related extreme weather and are also the most closely linked to climate change. The most extreme heat waves today would be impossible without human-caused warming.

But it's unclear how many people are dying in heat waves in the United States. In 2022, the Texas Department of State Health Services reported 279 heat-related deaths in the state, while the National Weather Service counted just 53 deaths in Texas. That discrepancy is likely because the National Weather Service counts only heat-related fatalities that occur on days hot enough to warrant an official heat advisory.

"You could still have heat-related deaths when the temperature is 95 degrees in Texas," says Gordon Strassberg, the storm data program manager for the National Weather Service. But such weather might not be hot enough to trigger an official heat advisory in a state where very hot weather is common. In that case, the National Weather Service wouldn't count the fatality, but the state government would.

A year earlier, in 2021, the Washington State Department of Health counted 100 deaths during the height of a record-shattering heat dome in the Pacific Northwest, while the National Weather Service reported just seven fatalities. The National Weather Service didn't have access to complete fatality data from the state of Washington, Strassberg says.

Amid concerns that many heat-related deaths might have been miscategorized on death certificates, Washington state epidemiologists used statistical methods to estimate how many extra deaths occurred compared with the same time period in previous years in the area. Those officials found that a more complete death toll for the heat dome is likely closer to 1,000 people.

Some wildfire-related deaths also go uncounted. Research shows that exposure to wildfire smoke contributes to thousands of deaths in the U.S. each year, but there is no national system for counting such deaths. And while the official number of people killed in the 2018 wildfire that destroyed much of Paradise, Calif., is between 84 and 86, that doesn't include dozens of suicide deaths that have been linked to despair and displacement in the aftermath of the fire, none of which are counted by any state or federal agency.

"We know like after a lot of [extreme weather] events that there's an increase in suicide, but there's not a good accounting of that and numbers that we can trust," Montano explains.

The Rev. Lara Crutsinger-Perry speaks at a memorial service for Barnett Moss, who died during a record-shattering heat wave in the Pacific Northwest in 2021. The death count disparities from heat waves are particularly large. Heat waves are by far the deadliest type of extreme weather and are the most closely linked to climate change.
Ted S. Warren / AP
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AP
The Rev. Lara Crutsinger-Perry speaks at a memorial service for Barnett Moss, who died during a record-shattering heat wave in the Pacific Northwest in 2021. The death count disparities from heat waves are particularly large. Heat waves are by far the deadliest type of extreme weather and are the most closely linked to climate change.

Agencies don't agree on which deaths to count

Official death counts vary mainly because it isn’t always obvious which deaths should be attributed to a weather disaster.

Direct deaths are the easiest to count. For example, if a tree falls on someone and kills the person during a hurricane, that individual's death is directly attributable to the storm, Lichtveld explains.

But deaths that are indirectly tied to extreme weather aren't counted as reliably. For example, many people die because of power outages during or after intense hurricanes, wildfires and heat waves. "If there is a disaster and there is no electricity and people who need dialysis can no longer get dialysis, so they go into kidney failure, that's an indirect [death]," Lichtveld says.

There are no standardized criteria to confirm a link between a death that lags an extreme weather event and the disaster itself, and it isn’t always clear where to draw the line. Many people have underlying health conditions, such as heart disease, that are exacerbated by loss of electricity, lack of access to medication or stress from being displaced by a disaster, leading them to die weeks or even months later.

In such cases, the connection between the weather and that person's death is often missing from their official death certificate. Because death certificates are the underlying data for the CDC and most state agencies that keep track of death records, such deaths often go uncounted after disasters.

"There's no uniformity with the death certificate[s]," says Kathryn Pinneri, the former president of the National Association of Medical Examiners. Every state gets to decide which data it gathers about weather-related fatalities. "It really is going to vary among jurisdictions."

The Camp Fire destroyed much of Paradise, Calif., in 2018. High winds and low humidity helped fuel the deadly wildfire. Intense wildfires are getting more common as the planet heats up.
Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
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Getty Images
The Camp Fire destroyed much of Paradise, Calif., in 2018. High winds and low humidity helped fuel the deadly wildfire. Intense wildfires are getting more common as the planet heats up.

This can lead to disparate official death counts. For instance, an agency like a state health department might track deaths that lag the weather event for a longer period or might have more expansive criteria for which deaths to count. In the end, that agency could report a higher death toll than agencies that stop tracking deaths sooner or that choose not to count deaths that are more tenuously connected to weather conditions.

"I think the lack of consistency in all the data reporting does cause a bit of confusion," says Strassberg, of the National Weather Service. He points out that some extreme weather events affect multiple states and that in some areas a single National Weather Service office will be responsible for parts of multiple states. Differences in how deaths are counted or reported can make it difficult to compare disaster impacts across states or over time.

Unlike the CDC, which is responsible for publicly reporting official U.S. death data for all types of fatalities, the National Weather Service gathers weather fatality data primarily for internal use, Strassberg says. For example, information about how many people died in a flood can help inform future flood warnings issued by the local National Weather Service office in that area.

"The fatality data we have is the best information available to our knowledge," he explains, and the numbers are widely used by academic researchers, local emergency managers and even insurance companies. But, Strassberg stresses, "our numbers are not official."

People seek shelter from the heat at a church in Phoenix in July 2023. Data about heat-related fatalities has helped spur emergency managers across the U.S. to open cooling centers on hot days. More detailed data about such deaths could help officials decide where to open such centers and how to ensure vulnerable people can access them.
Brandon Bell / Getty Images
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Getty Images
People seek shelter from the heat at a church in Phoenix in July 2023. Data about heat-related fatalities has helped spur emergency managers across the U.S. to open cooling centers on hot days. More detailed data about such deaths could help officials decide where to open such centers and how to ensure vulnerable people can access them.

Better disaster death data can save lives

Reliable data about how many people died in a flood, wildfire, hurricane or heat wave, as well as why those deaths occurred, can help save lives during future extreme weather.

"Many of the deaths are avoidable," says Wayne Blanchard, who worked at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for three decades and is now retired. "Particularly for the emergency management community, the more they know, the more enabled they'll be to try to develop mitigation measures" such as evacuation plans, shelters or weather warnings that are tailored to those who are most at risk.

For example, in the 1990s some cities began opening cooling centers during heat waves in response to large death tolls from prolonged heat exposure, Blanchard says. Such cooling centers are now a basic part of managing heat waves across the United States. Today, many city governments are hungry for more information about who is dying from heat exposure, because it can help inform where to place those cooling centers and how to help vulnerable people access them.

And data about drowning deaths in vehicles during flash floods helped spur a federal safety campaign warning drivers "Turn Around Don't Drown" if there is water in the road.

Accurate death counts after disasters can also be painfully personal and even financially important for the families of those who died. The Federal Emergency Management Agency helps pay for funerals for those whose deaths are officially linked to major disasters. But if a death isn't counted as disaster-related, families generally aren't eligible for those relief funds.

The vast majority of applications for FEMA funeral assistance after recent hurricanes were denied, according to a 2019 report by the Government Accountability Office, in part because of missing or incomplete death certificates.

The lack of concrete mortality numbers related to climate change is increasingly problematic at a national and global scale as well. Policymakers around the world rely on data about the human cost of climate change to justify policies that would help curb warming. The higher the death toll, the greater the economic and moral impetus to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change.

In a speech before the United Nations General Assembly in 2023, Secretary-General António Guterres invoked the approximately 1,700 people killed in climate-driven floods in Pakistan in 2022 as he argued that world leaders must spend more money to combat climate change. In 2021, a group of European teens joined climate protests in memory of a flash flood victim, drawing a direct line between that teen girl’s death and global climate policies. And senators from Vermont and Hawaii, states that experienced deadly floods and wildfires, respectively, in 2023, noted approximate death tolls from those disasters as they argued in May for long-term federal funding to help families and towns rebuild in more resilient ways.

The personal and the political stakes of accurate death counts were on display in forceful testimony by Rep. Jill Tokuda, D-Hawaii, in September 2023, nearly two months after wildfires killed at least 101 people in the city of Lahaina. "Far too many lives were lost in our tight-knit community," she told fellow lawmakers at a hearing about preventing future catastrophic burns by upgrading the electrical grid. "Some are still waiting anxiously for news of their loved ones. And while they want some kind of resolution, they fear that knock on the door."

"I want answers," Tokuda said. "How do we keep our families safe?"

Copyright 2024 NPR

Rebecca Hersher (she/her) is a reporter on NPR's Science Desk, where she reports on outbreaks, natural disasters, and environmental and health research. Since coming to NPR in 2011, she has covered the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, embedded with the Afghan army after the American combat mission ended, and reported on floods and hurricanes in the U.S. She's also reported on research about puppies. Before her work on the Science Desk, she was a producer for NPR's Weekend All Things Considered in Los Angeles.
Alejandra Borunda
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