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Tag: clark county

  • Measles Confirmed In Clark Co. Adult – KXL

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    Vancouver, Wash. – Public health officials in southwest Washington are investigating a confirmed case of measles in Clark County. They say the adult’s vaccination status is unverified; they recently traveled to an area experiencing a measles outbreak.

    The person was reportedly at Ridgefield High School while contagious, on January 14, 15 and 16. “People who were at Ridgefield High School those days and who have not been vaccinated against measles or have not had measles in the past are at risk for getting sick,” says Clark County Public Health. No other locations have been identified as potential exposure sites.

    The case follows three confirmed cases of measles in Oregon since the first of the year; two in Linn County and one in Clackamas County. A substantial outbreak of the disease is also underway in the southwestern U.S.

    “Measles is a disease we should be worried about. It can be a very bad disease,” says Kaiser Permanente Pediatrician Dr. Lisa Denike, “If your children are not vaccinated, I think you should be worried. If your children are vaccinated, the risk is much, much lower that your child could become infected if they’re exposed to a person with measles.”

    Initial symptoms include runny nose and fever, then a rash, fatigue and body aches. “The kids are quite miserable,” says Dr. Denike. “Risks of dehydration and secondary infections; we know the measles virus actually can suppress our immune systems. So, being infected with measles puts you at risk for contracting other illnesses.” She notes a patient can be infected and contagious as many as four days before symptoms emerge.

    Dr. Denike admits measles is still rare, despite the increase in recent years. She has only seen a couple of cases in her long career. “I will never forget those kids,” she tells KXL News, “Those were some of the sickest kids I’ve ever taken care of, and that really drove home to me the reason that we need to prevent measles infections. It’s not just a rash and a runny nose for two days.” She says vaccination is still the most effective way to prevent contracting and spreading the disease.

    If you think your family has been exposed, Dr. Denike says it’s important to contact your doctor, “I would suggest a virtual visit. Measles is incredibly contagious. It’s the most contagious disease there is. It can float in the air, it can be on surfaces for hours after an infected person has been in a specific location, which is why we worry when we start having these cases and we worry about exposures and tracking them.”

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    Heather Roberts

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  • Teenager Accused Of Strangling Woman To Death – KXL

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    VANCOUVER, Wash. – A 17-year-old girl was arrested early Sunday after allegedly strangling a woman to death during a disturbance at a home in Vancouver’s Minnehaha neighborhood.

    The Clark County Sheriff’s Office says deputies responded to a 911 call around 12:30 a.m. Sunday reporting a physical disturbance at a residence in the 4200 block of NE 54th Avenue. When they arrived, they found an adult woman who was not breathing. Despite life-saving efforts by deputies, Vancouver Fire Department personnel and AMR medics, the woman was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Witnesses told deputies the woman had been attacked and strangled by a juvenile female. Deputies located the suspect at a nearby residence and arrested her.

    The teen, who appeared to be under the influence of intoxicants and was uncooperative, was taken to a local hospital for evaluation before being booked into Clark County Juvenile Court Detention on suspicion of second-degree murder.

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    Grant McHill

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  • No survivors after small plane crashes in southwest WA

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    A small plane crashed near Goheen Airport north of Battle Ground on Thursday afternoon, killing everyone on board, according to Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue.

    What we know:

    Fire crews from Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue, Fire District 3 and Fire District 10 were dispatched at 1:08 p.m. to reports of a crash.

    Engine 22 arrived at the scene in about seven minutes and found a single-engine airplane fully engulfed in flames in a field near the airport, officials said.

    cessna plane crash photo

    A small plane crashed in Clark County, WA on Sept. 26, 2025. Officials said there were no survivors. (Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue)

    Crews quickly extinguished the fire and kept it from spreading to nearby trees and structures.

    What they’re saying:

    “Unfortunately, there were no survivors from the crash,” Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue said in a statement.

    The Clark County Sheriff’s Office has taken control of the scene and will work with the Federal Aviation Administration and the National Transportation Safety Board to investigate the cause.

    cessna plane crash photo

    A small plane crashed in Clark County, WA on Sept. 26, 2025. Officials said there were no survivors. (Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue)

    Dig deeper:

    Both agencies routinely respond to aviation accidents, gathering information about weather conditions, pilot records, maintenance history and other factors. A preliminary report is typically issued within a few weeks, with a final report that could take a year or more.

    Goheen Airport is a privately owned, public-use airport located about five miles north of Battle Ground. The small facility primarily serves general aviation pilots in Clark County and is used for recreational flying, flight training and light aircraft operations.

    Fatal crashes involving small aircraft are relatively rare but not unprecedented in southwest Washington. The NTSB has investigated several accidents in the region over the past decade, most involving privately owned planes operating from small airports.

    What we don’t know:

    Officials have not released the number of people on board Thursday’s flight or identified the victims. Further details will be provided as the investigation continues.

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    The Source: Information in this story came from Clark-Cowlitsz Fire Rescue and FOX 12 Oregon.

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    Tyler.Slauson@fox.com (Tyler Slauson)

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  • 2 injured after motorcycles crash in Clark County

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    Two people were hurt after two motorcycles crashed in Clark County on Sunday morning, an Ohio State Highway Patrol dispatcher confirmed.

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    The crash was reported in the area of Miller and Shrine roads before 11 a.m.

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    The dispatcher said the motorcyclists were riding together when the crash occurred.

    Information on the severity of injuries or how the crash happened was not immediately available.

    This crash is under investigation by the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

    News Center 7 is working to learn more and will continue to follow this story.

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  • I-70 slowly reopens after semi carrying motor oil crashes, loses load in Clark County

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    I-70 slowly reopens after semi carrying motor oil crashes, loses load in Clark County

    Two people were hospitalized after a crash involving two semi trucks on Interstate 70 Westbound in Clark County on Thursday.

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    Lanes are starting to reopen hours after the crash occurred near State Route 4 around 5 p.m.

    >> PHOTOS: Crash on I-70 in Clark County causes semi to lose it’s load

    Video from News Center 7’s crew on the scene shows that one semi was jackknifed and had lost a portion of its load, which was mainly motor oil.

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    An Ohio State Highway Patrol sergeant said the semi hauling motor oil struck another semi parked on the right shoulder.

    Cameras from the Ohio Department of Transportation caught a CareFlight landing on the interstate. It stayed there for nearly 20 minutes before taking off.

    Two people were transported to area hospitals, one of whom is in critical condition, according to crews on the scene.

    OSHP said Ohio Department of Transportation crews had to come in and use sand to clean up the oil.

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    Hazmat crews also responded to the scene to help clean up the spill.

    It is unclear when all westbound lanes will reopen.

    News Center 7 is working to learn more information and will continue to follow this story.

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  • UPDATE: 2 separate crashes on I-70 in Clark Co.; 1 hospitalized

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    UPDATE @5:25 a.m.

    Law enforcement responded to two separate crashes on Interstate 70 in Clark County.

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    WHIO Traffic Reporter Jake Magnotta is TRACKING this crash. He has the latest traffic information this morning on News Center 7 Daybreak from 4:25 a.m. until 7 a.m.

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    State troopers from the Springfield Post of the Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP) and medics responded around 3:45 a.m. to I-70 eastbound near State Route 72 on reports of a crash.

    An OSHP dispatcher confirmed to News Center 7 that the crash involved two semis. Medics also transported a person to an area hospital.

    ODOT cameras showed a second crash on I-70 westbound near State Route 72. The right lane is blocked on I-70 WB.

    We will continue to update this developing story.

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  • Clark Co Developmental Disabilities Advisory Board Seeks Plan Input – KXL

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    VANCOUVER, WA – The Clark County Developmental Disabilities Advisory Board is in the process of developing priorities to included in the 2026-2030 Developmental Disabilities Comprehensive Plan, and the group is looking for ideas.  Specifically, the DDAB is looking for input from people with intellectual and/or developmental disabilities, their family members, provider organizations, educators, and others with an interest in supporting people with disabilities.

    Clark County Community Services’ staff developed an online survey to collect the input, but there is also a paper version.  They say it will take less than 10 minutes to complete and is available in English, Spanish, Russian, Ukrainian, Chuukese and Vietnamese.

    Officials say the feedback is used to understand available resources, and which services are needed in the community.  Responses are confidential and anonymous.

    The survey is available online at https://clark.wa.gov/community-services/dd-comprehensive-plan. To request a paper copy or ask questions, email [email protected] or call Trish Buescher at 564-397-7826.

    Surveys will be collected through October 31st.

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    Tim Lantz

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  • Police Shoot And Kill Man During Standoff In Vancouver – KXL

    Police Shoot And Kill Man During Standoff In Vancouver – KXL

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    VANCOUVER, Wash. – A man was shot and killed by police in Vancouver early Friday morning.

    The incident began just before midnight, when a resident called 9-1-1 to report a neighbor was threatening to hurt another neighbor.

    Another 9-1-1 call then came in that the same man had fired a gun into the air and had slashed a neighbor’s tires.

    When law enforcement from multiple agencies arrived, they say the man ignored police commands, threatened to shoot deputies, and fired a high-powered rifle several times, including shattering the windshield of an armored police vehicle.

    Police eventually returned fire and killed the man.

    What happened remains under investigation.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Husband may have arranged for wife’s slaying in staged burglary, Washington cops say

    Husband may have arranged for wife’s slaying in staged burglary, Washington cops say

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    A man and his friend were arrested after authorities say his wife was found shot to death in their Washington home in what may have been a staged burglary, deputies say.

    A man and his friend were arrested after authorities say his wife was found shot to death in their Washington home in what may have been a staged burglary, deputies say.

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    A man and his friend were arrested after authorities say his wife was found shot to death in their Washington home in what may have been a staged burglary, deputies say.

    The husband, along with two friends, found his wife dead inside a Brush Prairie home on shortly before 7 p.m. March 23, the Clark County Sheriff’s Office said in a news alert.

    The next day, deputies said the Eugene Police Department in Oregon arrested the husband’s friend, Darrell Riley, 55, in relation to the 60-year-old woman’s killing.

    The husband may have had Riley stage a burglary “to commit the” killing, deputies say.

    The day of his wife’s killing, deputies said the man picked up Riley from Eugene and drove him to Clark County.

    When deputies initially responded to the home, they said a 2001 black Ford F-150 was “reported stolen from the scene.”

    It was later found with fire damage in rural Benton County, Oregon, deputies said.

    The fire “appears likely to have been intentionally set to destroy evidence of the murder,” according to deputies.

    After searching the home a second time, deputies said the husband was booked into jail on a count of making false statements, according to officials.

    Additional charges against the husband, who “is being considered a suspect” in his wife’s killing, are possible, deputies said.

    Riley, who is facing a first-degree murder charge, is in custody in Oregon, awaiting extradition to Washington, officials said.

    The investigation is ongoing, according to deputies.

    Brush Prairie sits near the Washington-Oregon border, about a 130 mile-drive north of Eugene.

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  • Las Vegas Judge Pounced On And Assaulted By Criminal In Court After Sentencing Him To Jail

    Las Vegas Judge Pounced On And Assaulted By Criminal In Court After Sentencing Him To Jail

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    Opinion

    Source: TODAY YouTube

    A judge in Las Vegas, Nevada was pounced on and assaulted by a criminal in court on Wednesday morning after she sentenced him to jail.

    Judge Attacked By Convicted Criminal

    Daily Mail reported that Judge Mary Kay Holthus from the Clark County District Court was in the middle of sentencing Deobra Delone Redden for aggravated battery with substantial bodily harm after denying him bail when he leaped from where he was standing into the judge’s bench and attacked her. As he lunged at the stunned judge, Redden could be heard saying, “nah f*** that b*tch.”

    Both Holthus and her marshal tried to dodge the attack, but Redden overtook them and proceeded to beat up the judge. Harrowing video footage shows Redden repeatedly hurl punches at the judge while shouting expletives as security officers tried to restrain him.

    Judge Holthus begged Redden to get off of her, but he continued the attack until he was finally subdued. Judge Holthus reportedly “experienced some injuries” from this attack, but was not hospitalized. Her marshal, however, was rushed to the hospital and had to receive stitches for a head injury.

    “We commend the heroic acts of her staff, law enforcement, and all others who subdued the defendant,” Las Vegas District Court told Channel 13. “The court remains committed to a safe and secure courthouse and courtrooms. 

    “We are reviewing all our protocols and will do whatever is necessary to protect the judiciary, the public, and our employees,” the statement added.

    Redden, 30, has an extensive criminal history in both Nevada and Texas. Records show that he was also facing charges for battery, robbery, assault, injury to property and coercion.

    Related: California 7-Eleven Workers Placed Under Investigation For Assault After Defending Store From Robber

    Redden Begged Judge For Leniency

    Earlier in Wednesday’s hearing, Redden had asked the judge for leniency, describing himself as “a person who never stops trying to do the right thing no matter how hard it is.”

    “I’m not a rebellious person,” he told the judge as he argued that he should not be sent to prison, according to ABC News. “But if it’s appropriate for you then you have to do what you have to do.”

    Judge Holthus, however, was not having any of it, and she made it clear that she intended to send Redden to prison.

    “I appreciate that but I think it’s time he got a taste of something else, because I just can’t with that history,” Judge Holthus said, according to NBC News.

    This was enough to cause Redden to become irate and attack the judge.

    “It happened so fast it was hard to know what to do,” said Richard Scow, the chief county district attorney who prosecuted Redden.

    Related: Fox Reporter Brutally Assaulted – Sucker Punched In Terrifying TikTok Challenge

    Redden Hit With New Charges

    Judge Holthus is a career prosecutor with more than 27 years of courthouse experience, and she was elected to the state court bench in 2018 and again in 2022.

    Redden is set to appear in court once again today to face multiple new felony charges of battery and battery against a protected person, referring to the judge and court staff.

    What do you think about this? Let us know your thoughts in the comments section.

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    James Conrad

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  • WATCH: Clark County, Nevada inmate attacks judge in court

    WATCH: Clark County, Nevada inmate attacks judge in court

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    WATCH: Clark County, Nevada inmate attacks judge in court

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  • Why a Blue-Leaning Swing State Is Getting Redder

    Why a Blue-Leaning Swing State Is Getting Redder

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    Last week, when The New York Times and Siena College released a poll that showed President Joe Biden in trouble in battleground states, Democrats began to sound apocalyptic. The panic, turbocharged by social media, was disproportionate to what the surveys actually showed. Although the results in my home state, Nevada, were the worst for the president out of the six swing states that were polled, the findings are almost certainly not reflective of the reality here, at least as I’ve observed it and reported on it.

    Nevertheless, they bring to the surface trends that should worry Democrats—and not just in Nevada.

    The Times/Siena data show Donald Trump ahead of Biden in Nevada 52 percent to 41 percent, a much larger margin than the former president’s lead in the other battleground states. Could this be true? I’m skeptical, and I’m not alone. After the poll came out, I spoke with a handful of experts in both parties here, and none thinks Trump is truly ahead by double digits in the state, where he lost by about 2.5 points in the previous two presidential cycles. But Nevada is going to be competitive, perhaps more so than ever.

    Some of the Times/Siena poll’s internal numbers gave me pause. Among registered voters in Clark County, where Las Vegas is located and where 70 percent of the electorate resides, the poll found Trump ahead of Biden 50–45. But Democrats make up 34 percent of active voters in the county, compared with Republicans’ 25 percent, and Biden won Clark by nine percentage points in 2020.

    Other recent polls, not quite as highly rated as Times/Siena’s, have found the presidential race here to be much closer than the Times did. Last month, a CNN poll of registered Nevada voters found Biden and Trump virtually tied. Recent surveys from Emerson College, which has been unreliable in the state in the past, and Morning Consult/Bloomberg both had Trump up three points among likely voters. The Times/Siena polling outfit has a good reputation, but shortly before the 2020 election, it found Biden ahead of Trump in Nevada by six percentage points, more than double Biden’s eventual margin of victory.

    Nevada is difficult to poll for a variety of reasons. Here as much as anywhere else, pollsters tend to underestimate the number of people they need to survey by cellphone to get a representative sample, and they generally don’t do enough bilingual polling in Nevada, where nearly a third of the population is Hispanic. Nevada also has a transient population, lots of residents working 24/7 shifts, and an electorate that’s less educated than most other states’. (“I love the poorly educated,” Trump said after winning Nevada’s Republican caucuses in 2016.) The polling challenge has become only more acute, because nonpartisan voters now outnumber Democrats and Republicans in Nevada, making it harder for pollsters to accurately capture the Democratic or Republican vote. (Since 2020, a state law has allowed voters to register at the DMV, and if they fail to do so, their party affiliation is defaulted to independent.)

    Nevada matters in presidential elections, but we are also, let’s face it, a tad weird.

    Still, Democrats have reasons to worry. Nevada was clobbered by COVID disproportionately to the rest of the country, because our economy is so narrowly focused on the casino industry. The aftereffects—unemployment, inflation—are still very much being felt here. Nevada’s jobless rate is the highest in the country, at 5.4 percent. That’s down dramatically from an astonishing 28.2 percent in April 2020, when the governor closed casinos for a few months. Although the situation has clearly improved, many casino workers still haven’t been rehired.

    Democrat Steve Sisolak was the only incumbent governor in his party to lose in 2022, and his defeat was due at least partly to the fallout from COVID. Fairly or not, President Biden wears a lot of that too, as all presidents do when voters are unhappy with the economy. The Morning Consult/Bloomberg poll illuminated the bleak pessimism of Nevada voters, 76 percent of whom think the U.S. economy is going in the wrong direction.

    Here, as elsewhere, voters are also concerned about Biden’s age, and that informs their broader views of him. Sixty-two percent of Nevadans disapprove of Biden’s performance, according to the Times, and only 40 percent have a favorable impression of him. Trump’s numbers, although awful—44 percent see him favorably—are better than Biden’s here, as well as in some blue or bluish states.

    In Nevada, and in general, Biden is losing support among key groups—young and nonwhite voters. The Times/Siena poll found Biden and Trump tied among Hispanics in the state, despite the fact that Latinos have been a bedrock of the Democratic base here for a decade and a half. In the 2022 midterms, polls taken early in the race showed Catherine Cortez Masto, the first Latina elected to the U.S. Senate, losing Hispanic support, though her campaign managed to reverse that trend enough to win by a very slim margin.

    Democratic presidential nominees have won Nevada in every election since 2008. Democrats also hold the state’s two U.S. Senate seats and three of the four House seats, and the party dominates both houses of the legislature. But the state has been slowly shifting to the right—not just in polling but in Election Day results. In 2020, Nevada was the only battleground state that saw worse Democratic performance compared with 2016, unless you include the more solidly red Florida. Nevada’s new Republican governor, Joe Lombardo, is building a formidable political machine. Republicans have made inroads with working-class white voters here, leaving Democrats with an ever-diminishing margin of error.

    Abortion, an issue that was crucial to Cortez Masto’s narrow victory, could help Biden in Nevada. The Times/Siena poll showed that only a quarter of Nevadans think abortion should be always or mostly illegal. A 1990 referendum made abortion up to 24 weeks legal here, and the law can be changed only by another popular vote. Democrats in Nevada, though, want to take those protections a step further next year and are trying to qualify a ballot measure that would amend the state constitution to guarantee the right to abortion. As the off-year elections last week showed, that issue, more than the choice between Biden and Trump, could be what saves the president a year from now. Nevada also has a nationally watched Senate race in 2024, in which the incumbent Democrat, Jacky Rosen, has already signaled that she will mimic her colleague Cortez Masto and put abortion front and center in her campaign.

    So many events could intervene between now and next November, foreign and/or domestic, and we have yet to see how effective the Trump and Biden campaigns will be, assuming that each man is his party’s nominee. Democratic Senator Harry Reid was deeply unpopular here in 2009, then got reelected by almost six percentage points; Barack Obama was thought to be in trouble in 2011, then won Nevada and reelection.

    Democrats clearly hope that if Trump becomes the Republican nominee, many voters will see the election as a binary choice and will back Biden. But if the election instead becomes a referendum on Biden’s tenure, including the economy he has presided over, Trump could plausibly win Nevada—and the Electoral College.

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    Jon Ralston

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  • The Enigma of ‘Heat-Related’ Deaths

    The Enigma of ‘Heat-Related’ Deaths

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    The autopsy should have been a piece of cake. My patient had a history of widely metastatic cancer, which was pretty straightforward as far as causes of death go. Entering the various body cavities, my colleague and I found what we anticipated: Nearly every organ was riddled with tumors. But after we had completed the work, I realized that I knew why the patient had died, but not why he’d died that day. We found no evidence of a heart attack or blood clot or ruptured bowel. Nothing to explain his sudden demise. Yes, he had advanced cancer—but he’d been living with that cancer the day before he died, and over many weeks and months preceding. I asked my colleague what he thought. Perhaps there had been some subtle change in the patient’s blood chemistry, or in his heart’s electrical signaling, that we simply couldn’t see? “I guess the patient just up and died,” he said.

    I’m a hospital pathologist; my profession is one of many trying to explain the end of life. In that role, I have learned time and again that even the most thorough medical exams leave behind uncertainty. Take the current spate of heat-related fatalities brought on by a summer of record-breaking temperatures. Residents of Phoenix endured a month of consecutive 110-degree days. People have been literally sizzling on sidewalks. And news organizations are taking note of what is said to be a growing body count: 39 heat deaths in Maricopa County, Arizona; 10 in Laredo, Texas. But the precision of these figures is illusory. Cause of death cannot be measured as exactly as the temperature, and what qualifies as “heat-related” will always be a judgment call: Some people die from heat; others just up and die when it happens to be hot.

    Mortality is contested ground, a place where different types of knowledge are in conflict. In Clark County, Nevada, for example, coroners spend weeks investigating possible heat-related deaths. Families are interviewed, death scenes are inspected, and medical tests are performed. The coroner must factor in all of these sources of information because no single autopsy finding can definitively diagnose a heat fatality. A victim may be found to have suffered from hyperthermia—an abnormally high body temperature—or they may be tossed into the more subjective bucket of those who died from ”environmental heat stress.”

    Very few deaths undergo such an extensive forensic examination in the first place. Most of the time, the circumstances appear straightforward—a 75-year-old has a stroke; a smoker succumbs to an exacerbation of his chronic lung disease—and the patient’s primary-care doctor or hospital physician completes the death certificate on their own. But heat silently worsens many preexisting conditions; oppressive temperatures can cause an already dysfunctional organ to fail. A recent study out of China estimated that mortality from heart attacks can rise as much as 74 percent during a severe, several-day heat wave. Another study from the U.S. found that even routine temperature fluctuations can subtly alter kidney function, cholesterol levels, and blood counts. Physicians can’t easily tease out these influences. If an elderly man on a park bench suddenly slouches over from a heart attack in 90-degree weather, it’s hard to say for sure whether the heat was what did him in. Epidemiologists must come to the rescue, using statistics to uncover those hidden causes at the population level. This bird’s-eye view shows a simple fact: Bad weather means more death. But it still doesn’t tell us what to think about the man on the bench.

    Research (and common sense) tells us that some individuals are going to be especially vulnerable to climate risks. Poverty, physical labor, substandard housing, advanced age, and medical comorbidities all put one in greater danger of experiencing heat-related illness. The weather has a way of kicking you while you’re down, and the wealthy and able-bodied are better able to dodge the blows. A financial struggle as small as an unpaid $51 portion of an electricity bill can prove deadly in the summer. In the autopsies I’ve performed, a patient’s family, medical record, and living situation often told a story of long-term social neglect. But there was no place on the death certificate for me to describe these tragic circumstances. There was certainly no checkbox to indicate that climate change contributed to a fatality. Such matters were out of my jurisdiction.

    The public-health approach to assessing deaths has its own problems. Mostly it’s confusing. Reams of scientific studies have reported on hundreds of different risk factors for mortality. Sultry weather appears to be dangerous, but so do skipping breakfast, taking naps, and receiving care from a male doctor. Researchers have declared just about everything a major killer. A few months ago, the surgeon general announced that feeling disconnected is as deadly as smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day. The FDA commissioner has said that misinformation is the nation’s leading cause of premature death. And is poverty or medical error the fourth-leading cause? I can’t keep track.

    With so many mortality statistics at our disposal, which ones get emphasized can be more a matter of politics than science. Liberals see the current heat wave—and its wave of heat-related deaths—as an urgent call to action to combat climate change, while conservatives dismiss this concern as a mental disorder. A recent Wall Street Journal op-ed concluded that worrying about climate change is irrational, because “if heat waves were as deadly as the press proclaims, Homo sapiens couldn’t have survived thousands of years without air conditioning.” (Humans survived thousands of years without penicillin, but syphilis was still a net negative.) Similarly, when COVID became the third-leading cause of death in the U.S., pandemic skeptics said it was a fiction: Victims were dying “with COVID,” not “from COVID.” Because many people who died of SARS-CoV-2 had underlying risk factors, some politicians and doctors brushed off the official numbers as hopelessly confounded. Who could say whether the virus had killed anyone at all?

    The dismissal of COVID’s carnage was mostly cynical and unscientific. But it’s true that death certificates paint one picture of the pandemic, and excess-death calculations paint another. Scientists will be debating COVID’s exact body count for decades. Fatalities from heat are subject to similar ambiguities, even as their determination comes with real-world consequences. In June, for example, officials from Multnomah County, Oregon—where Portland is located—sued oil and gas producers over the effects of a 2021 heat wave that resulted in 69 heat-related deaths, as officially recorded. This statistic will likely be subjected to intense cross-examination. The pandemic showed us that casting doubt on the deceased is a convenient strategy.

    No matter how we count the bodies, extreme weather leads to suffering—especially among the most vulnerable members of society. A lot of people have already perished during this summer’s heat wave. Their passing is more than a coincidence—not all of them just up and died.

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    Benjamin Mazer

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  • Here’s Why Arizona And Nevada’s Key Senate Races Are Still Undecided

    Here’s Why Arizona And Nevada’s Key Senate Races Are Still Undecided

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    The results of pivotal races in Arizona and Nevada that could determine which party controls the Senate remain up in the air, and it could take several more days until there’s clarity on who won.

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