Poverty more prevalent among those who died during B.C.’s heat dome: study
VANCOUVER — A researcher who looked into deaths during the eight hottest days of B.C.’s deadly heat dome says that equitably addressing the impacts of climate change would mean placing a larger focus on people living in poverty.
Sarah Henderson was part of a team with the B.C. Centre for Disease Control that compared about 1,500 people who died from a range of causes during the heat dome with similar people who survived, focusing on health conditions and socioeconomic status.
The study, published this week in Environment Research: Health, found the risk factor most strongly associated with dying during those sweltering days in the summer of 2021 was whether that person was receiving income assistance.
Their calculations show there were 2.4 times more people living in poverty who died during the heat dome compared with people who survived.


