Climate Change Nearly Doubled Pregnancy Heat Risk Days in U.S.
Climate Change Nearly Doubled Pregnancy Heat Risk Days in U.S.

www.climatecentral.org
Climate Change Nearly Doubled Pregnancy Heat Risk Days in U.S. | Climate Central

- Climate Central’s new global analysis shows that human-caused climate change has at least doubled the average number of pregnancy heat-risk days (extremely hot days associated with increased risk of preterm birth) in 222 countries from 2020 to 2024.
- In the U.S., climate change added 12 (48%) of the 25 average annual pregnancy heat-risk days experienced during the last five years.
- All 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia experienced at least one additional week’s worth of pregnancy heat-risk days due to climate change, on average annually.
- Cities across the U.S. Southwest had the highest average number of pregnancy heat-risk days added by climate change.
- In addition to extreme heat, climate change-related extreme weather events put pregnant people at risk from air pollution, flooding, infrastructure damages, and prenatal stress.
archived (Wayback Machine)