
By Paul Homewood
An interesting account of how the body responds to the cold:

Mention deadly cold and I think of polar explorers with icicles dangling from their beards and mountaineers tackling the heights of Everest; of fingers turning black with frostbite and the chilling clutch of hypothermia.
So, I was sceptical when I was asked to take part in a cold experiment that took place at just 10 degrees Celsius. Yes, 10C.
To me that’s mild, nowhere near freezing and certainly no Arctic blast. Surely, we’d have to go much colder before putting a strain on the body? I was wrong.
“It sounds mild, but it is a real physiological challenge,” Prof Damian Bailey, from the University of South Wales, tells me.
He’s invited me to his laboratory to explore the impact of cold homes on our bodies and why such seemingly mild temperatures can become deadly.
“Ten degrees is the average temperature that people will be living in, if they can’t afford to heat their homes,” said Prof Bailey.
And as I was about to find out, 10C has a profound impact on the heart, lungs and brain.

Full story here.
But this comment should be mandatory reading for all BBC journalists:

Fortunately, such cold snaps are much less common than they used to be:

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
November 19, 2022
Cold Snaps Kill More Than Hot Snaps- BBC Admits — NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
You must be logged in to post a comment.