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Visitors throng to the Lantern Festival in Taipei, Taiwan, to mark the end of Lunar New Year celebrations on February 6. Taiwanese officials and media reports are blaming a cold spell for the deaths of more than 150 people, most of them elderly and sick, over the past several days. Photo: AP

Taiwanese cold spell linked to more than 150 deaths in five days

Unusually low temperatures blamed for rise in deaths in typically warm region

Taiwan

Taiwanese officials and media reports are blaming a cold spell for the deaths of more than 150 people, most of them elderly and sick, over the past several days.

Temperatures fell as low as 6.7 degrees Celsius on Thursday evening along the coast north of the capital, Taipei.

Taiwan’s Liberty Times newspaper and the United Daily News reported that the deaths of 154 people since then were likely related to the cold. Reports said below normal temperatures around much of the island from Thursday night through Sunday might have triggered deadly heart attacks and strokes as well as the deaths of elderly people with influenza.

Temperatures in Taipei average 16 degrees in January, according to Taiwan’s Central Weather Bureau. Because of the relatively mild norms, most households in Taiwan lack central heating, another suspected factor in the recent deaths.

Emergency calls in Taipei rose as temperatures fell to their lowest point, said Wang Yao-chen, emergency relief chief of the city. The city’s caseload went up by more than 40 on Friday and 10 people died, Wang said.

“As for whether there’s a connection with the cold, it’s quite possible that it made people with heart problems, high blood pressure and diabetes feel more discomfort,” Wang said.

Although hospitals and emergency personnel are still evaluating the causes of deaths reported since Thursday, elderly people without indoor heat were particularly in danger, according to the Taiwan Centres for Disease Control.

“We do predict some increase in the number of cases from severe complications,” said the Centres’ deputy director, Luo Yi-chun. “We’d like to advise older people to stay warm, especially at night, when the change in temperature is so large.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Taiwan cold spell linked to more than 150 deaths
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