Recent studies suggest at least a 10 per cent rise in hospital emergency room visits on days when temperatures reach or exceed the top 5 per cent of the normal temperature range for a given location. Soaring temperatures can also make symptoms worse in those with mental health conditions. Heatwaves as well as other weather events such as floods and fires have been linked to a rise in depressive symptoms in people with depression, and a rise in anxiety symptoms in those with generalised anxiety disorder, a disorder where people feel anxious most of the time.
There is also a link between daily high temperature and suicide and suicide attempts. And, roughly speaking, for every 1 degree Celsius increase in monthly average temperature, mental health-related deaths increase by 2.2 per cent. Spikes in relative humidity also result in a higher occurrence of suicide. Humidity and temperature both of which are changing as a result of human-induced climate change have been causally linked to a rise in manic episodes in people with bipolar disorder. This state of the illness causes significant harm and can result in hospitalisation for psychosis and thoughts of suicide.
Further problems are posed by the fact that the effectiveness of important drugs used to treat psychiatric illness can be reduced by the effects of heat. We know that many drugs increase the risk of heat-related death, for example, antipsychotics, which can suppress thirst resulting in people becoming dehydrated. Some drugs will work differently depending on the body temperature and how dehydrated the person is, such as lithium, a very potent and widely used mood-stabiliser, frequently prescribed for people with bipolar disorder.
Fuzzy thinking, aggressive behaviour
Heat can also affect the mental health and ability to think and reason of people without a mental health disorder. Research shows that areas of the brain responsible for framing and solving complex cognitive tasks are impaired by heat stress. A study of students in Boston found that those in rooms without air conditioning during a heatwave performed 13 per cent worse than their peers in cognitive tests and had 13 per cent slower reaction time.