NPR

Can you survive summer indoors without AC? In Arizona, many don’t

Nearly half of the people who suffered heat-related deaths in Arizona last year lived outdoors without shelter, but public health officials and lawmakers are starting to pay more attention to the risk of dying indoors.
A thermometer in the Carole Ann Kane's mobile home in Mesa shows temperatures in the 90s on April 16, 2024. Temperatures will soar much higher as the summer arrives. (Peter O'Dowd/Here & Now)

Last August, an elderly man named Ronald Davies was at home with his sick wife in the Phoenix suburb of Chandler. It was summertime. Their air conditioning unit had recently broken, and when investigators finally arrived to check on them, the temperature inside their mobile home was 102 degrees.

Davies and his wife were two of the 645 people who died in last summer’s record-shattering heat, according to records from the Maricopa County medical examiner.

Nearly half of those people lived outdoors without shelter, but public health officials and lawmakers are starting to pay more attention to the risk of dying indoors.

In a city where temperatures can flirt with 120 degrees, not everyone has air conditioning —

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