{
  "slug": "heat-stroke-outdoor",
  "question": "What are the odds of dying from heat stroke or severe heat illness during outdoor activity?",
  "category": "health",
  "tags": [
    "travel"
  ],
  "no_reliable_estimate": false,
  "perceived": {
    "description": "Heat stroke and severe dehydration occupy a reliable slot in the pre-summer anxiety calendar, particularly among parents sending children to outdoor camps, hikers planning desert trips, and anyone who has read a news story about a marathon runner collapsing. The fear is vivid and concrete enough that it drives a large market in electrolyte drinks, misting fans, and public-health campaigns, yet most healthy recreational adults would struggle to locate themselves on any actual risk distribution. The intuitive estimate — that serious heat illness is a meaningful personal risk during outdoor summer activity — overstates the typical healthy adult's exposure by at least one to two orders of magnitude while simultaneously underweighting the subgroups that carry the real mortality burden.\n",
    "rough_estimate": "most recreational adults would guess 1-in-500 to 1-in-5,000 odds of serious harm during an active outdoor summer",
    "kind": "intuition"
  },
  "native": {
    "display": "~2,325 heat-related deaths per year (age-adjusted rate 0.62 per 100,000; US, 2023)",
    "numerator": 2325,
    "denominator": 335000000,
    "unit": "per year",
    "population": "US total population, all ages (2023 NVSS; JAMA 2024)"
  },
  "normalized": {
    "lifetime_us_adult": 0.000525,
    "display": "~1 in 1,900 lifetime (US adult)",
    "log_value": -3.28,
    "assumptions": "Uses 2,325 US heat-related deaths in 2023 from JAMA/NVSS (Ramirez et al. 2024), the most recent year with published final counts, against the AAMR of 0.62 per 100,000 person-years. Applying the crude annual hazard (2,325 / ~261 million US adults aged 18+) yields ~8.9 per million adults per year. Compounded over 59 years of remaining adult life: 1 − (1 − 8.9e-6)^59 ≈ 0.000525, or roughly 1 in 1,900. The headline entry is framed as the general-population risk, which is dominated by non-recreational deaths (elderly at home without air conditioning, outdoor workers). Recreational and outdoor-activity heat deaths represent a small fraction of that total; most hiker/athlete heat fatalities appear in exertional heat stroke counts, not the broader NVSS tally. The uncertainty band spans: low end uses the 2004-2018 annual average of ~702 deaths (MMWR 2020) as a plausible floor under conservative cause-of-death coding; high end applies broader contributing-cause coding (approximately 5,000+ deaths/year) per EPA technical documentation.\n",
    "uncertainty": {
      "low": 0.00015,
      "high": 0.0011
    },
    "scope": "us_adult_lifetime"
  },
  "sources": [
    {
      "url": "https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2822854",
      "title": "Trends of Heat-Related Deaths in the US, 1999–2023",
      "publisher": "JAMA (Ramirez et al., including CDC/NCHS co-authors)",
      "source_type": "peer_reviewed",
      "statistic": "2,325 heat-related deaths in 2023; age-adjusted mortality rate 0.62 per 100,000 person-years; 117% increase in count from 1999 (1,069) to 2023 (2,325); AAPC +16.8% per year from 2016–2023",
      "excerpt": "\"The number of heat-related deaths increased from 1069 in 1999 to 2325 in 2023, a 117% increase in the number of heat-related deaths and a 63% increase in the age-adjusted mortality rate (AAMR). From 1999 to 2023, a total of 21,518 deaths were recorded as heat-related in the US. The AAMR increased from 0.38 per 100,000 person-years in 1999 to 0.62 per 100,000 person-years in 2023.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2024-08-27",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-01",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260305025125/https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2822854",
      "calculation_notes": "Primary annual count and AAMR source. 2,325 deaths in 2023 against a US adult population of ~261 million (18+) yields an approximate annual adult hazard of 8.9 per million. Lifetime calculation: 1 − (1 − 8.9e-6)^59 ≈ 0.000525 ≈ 1 in 1,900. The JAMA paper uses NCHS NVSS ICD-10 codes X30 (exposure to excessive natural heat), W92 (exposure to excessive heat of man-made origin), and T67 (effects of heat and light) — the same coding base as the CDC MMWR 2004-2018 report.\n",
      "independence_note": "Ramirez et al. draws directly from CDC WONDER / NVSS death-certificate data. The second source (CDC MMWR 2020) uses the same underlying NVSS pipeline for the earlier 2004-2018 period; treat the two as methodologically linked but covering non-overlapping date ranges.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6924a1.htm",
      "title": "Heat-Related Deaths — United States, 2004–2018",
      "publisher": "CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), Vol. 69, No. 24",
      "source_type": "govt_report",
      "statistic": "Average 702 heat-related deaths per year, 2004–2018; 415 with heat as underlying cause, 287 as contributing cause; persons aged ≥65 years accounted for ~39% of deaths at a rate of 0.7 per 100,000",
      "excerpt": "\"During 2004–2018, a total of 10,527 heat-related deaths occurred in the United States, an average of 702 per year. Of these, 6,221 (59.1%) had heat as the underlying cause of death, and 4,306 (40.9%) had heat as a contributing cause. Persons aged ≥65 years accounted for 4,019 (38.2%) of decedents; the rate of heat-related deaths among persons aged ≥65 years was 0.7 per 100,000.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2020-06-18",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-01",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260513190247/https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6924a1.htm",
      "calculation_notes": "The 2004-2018 average of 702/year provides the low-end anchor for the uncertainty band. Using 702 deaths / ~245 million US adults circa 2011 midpoint ≈ 2.86 per million per year. Lifetime: 1 − (1 − 2.86e-6)^59 ≈ 0.000169 ≈ 1 in 5,900. Rounded to 0.00015 for the uncertainty low. The age distribution data (39% of deaths among persons ≥65) is used for the caveats heterogeneity section; it anchors the claim that mortality concentrates in elderly non-recreational decedents.\n",
      "independence_note": "CDC MMWR report using NVSS/NCHS death-certificate data, same pipeline as JAMA 2024 Ramirez et al. but covering an earlier, lower-mortality period. Used here as a floor anchor for the uncertainty band and for the age-distribution breakdown.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6029a1.htm",
      "title": "Nonfatal Sports and Recreation Heat Illness Treated in Hospital Emergency Departments — United States, 2001–2009",
      "publisher": "CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), Vol. 60, No. 29",
      "source_type": "govt_report",
      "statistic": "~5,946 persons treated annually in US EDs for sports/recreation heat illness, rate of 2.0 per 100,000 population; 7.1% of patients hospitalized; 72.5% male, 35.6% aged 15–19",
      "excerpt": "\"An estimated 5,946 persons were treated in U.S. emergency departments (EDs) each year for a heat illness sustained while participating in a sport or recreational activity, for an estimated annual rate of 2.0 ED visits per 100,000 population. Incidence was highest among males (72.5%) and among those aged 15–19 years (35.6%), and 7.1% of patients were hospitalized.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2011-07-29",
      "source_accessed": "2026-05-01",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260503090854/https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6029a1.htm",
      "calculation_notes": "The sports/recreation-specific data reframes the broader mortality statistic: ~5,946 ED visits/year for recreational heat illness, of which ~7.1% = ~422 are hospitalized. Recreational heat illness hospitalizations are thus roughly one order of magnitude less common than heat illness requiring any ER visit. Fatal recreational heat stroke is a subset of hospitalizations and is not separately enumerated in this dataset; it represents a small fraction of the ~702-2,325 total annual heat deaths. This source is used to support the claim that the headline mortality figure is not primarily a recreational risk.\n",
      "independence_note": "Uses National Electronic Injury Surveillance System-All Injury Program (NEISS-AIP), a probability sample of US hospital EDs — methodologically independent from the NVSS death-certificate pipeline used in the mortality sources.\n"
    }
  ],
  "comparison_anchors": [
    {
      "label": "Dying in a car crash (lifetime, US adult)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.0108
    },
    {
      "label": "Fatal drowning (lifetime, US adult)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.0009
    },
    {
      "label": "Lightning strike death (lifetime, US adult)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.000083
    }
  ],
  "personal_factor_multipliers": [
    {
      "factor": "outdoor manual worker (agriculture, construction, landscaping) in summer",
      "multiplier": 8,
      "notes": "OSHA and BLS data indicate outdoor workers account for a disproportionate share of heat fatalities. CDC analysis of occupational heat deaths 1992-2021 found ~33 worker heat deaths per year vs. baseline; agriculture and construction workers face the highest burden. An 8x multiplier relative to the general adult average is conservative.\n"
    },
    {
      "factor": "age 65 or older",
      "multiplier": 4,
      "notes": "CDC MMWR 2020: persons aged ≥65 had a heat-related mortality rate of 0.7 per 100,000 vs. the all-ages rate of ~0.5 per 100,000 circa 2004-2018 — approximately 1.4× the average, but concentrated in sedentary/indoor settings. In the 2023 elevated-mortality year, older adults remain disproportionately represented. The 4x estimate applies to elderly adults specifically engaged in outdoor exertion without adequate hydration or shade.\n"
    },
    {
      "factor": "no access to air conditioning in high heat-index region",
      "multiplier": 3,
      "notes": "The CDC MMWR noted higher heat death rates in large central metropolitan and non-metropolitan counties and in lower-income populations. Lack of home AC during heat waves is one of the strongest environmental risk amplifiers for heat mortality, particularly for elderly and chronically ill individuals.\n"
    },
    {
      "factor": "healthy adult, moderate outdoor recreation (hiking, cycling), acclimatized",
      "multiplier": 0.1,
      "notes": "The ~5,946 annual sports/recreation ED visits represent about 2 per 100,000 population — predominantly non-fatal. A healthy acclimatized adult engaging in standard recreational outdoor activity during summer faces substantially below-average fatal heat illness risk compared to the population mean, which is pulled up by elderly and occupational deaths.\n"
    }
  ],
  "short_label": "Heat stroke (outdoor)",
  "myth_framing": "overrated",
  "outcome_severity": "fatal",
  "exposure_pattern": "recurring",
  "outcome_type": "serious_permanent_harm",
  "valence": "negative",
  "caveats": "The headline ~1-in-1,900 lifetime figure represents all heat-related deaths across the US population — including elderly people dying at home without air conditioning, outdoor laborers, and the unhoused — not specifically recreational or vacation-related heat illness. Recreational and sports-specific heat deaths account for a small fraction of the total; the CDC's sports/recreation data captures roughly 6,000 ER visits per year, with only ~7% requiring hospitalization and very few resulting in death. The 2023 total of 2,325 heat deaths reflects a sharply upward trend since 2016 (AAPC +16.8%/year) compared with the 2004-2018 average of ~702/year; the uncertainty band spans this historical range. Risk is highly heterogeneous: persons aged ≥65, outdoor workers, people without home air conditioning, and those with cardiovascular or renal disease carry a disproportionate share of mortality. A healthy, acclimatized recreational adult with access to water and shade faces substantially lower odds than the population average. Heat illness that requires ER evaluation is far more common than heat death but is rarely life-threatening in otherwise healthy people; the serious fear — fatal heat stroke — is concentrated in the high-risk subgroups named above.\n",
  "quality_score": {
    "d1": 4,
    "d2": 5,
    "d3": 4,
    "d4": 5,
    "d5": 4,
    "d6": 5,
    "d7": 5,
    "d8": 5,
    "avg": 4.625,
    "scored_by": "extracted-from-transcript",
    "scored_at": "2026-05-03",
    "methodology_version": "1.0"
  },
  "reviewer": "quality-review-agent-2026-05-03",
  "last_reviewed": "2026-05-03",
  "reviewed": true,
  "generated_at": "2026-05-01",
  "image": {
    "alt": "A single water bottle casting a long shadow on a sunlit dusty trail, flat vector illustration in muted earth tones."
  },
  "attribution": "Likelier — https://likelier.app",
  "license": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/",
  "support": "https://buymeacoffee.com/kgluszczyk?via=likelier&utm_content=api-fear-single",
  "canonical_url": "https://likelier.app/heat-stroke-outdoor"
}