According to a report by Expresso, the study found that in
this wave, mortality was 60% higher in units without air conditioning, and the
installation of air conditioning systems in inpatient services was recommended.
But, 20 years later, there are hospitals that still do not
have air conditioning, as is the case of Neonatology at Hospital de Faro, where
parents fear for their babies.
Also at Centro Hospitalar Tondela-Viseu, several services
continue without air conditioning and during the last heat wave there were
patients who felt unwell and who had "clinical complications caused by the
abrupt rise in temperatures".
In this unit, ventilation is done using fans or
"portable equipment", and there are even professionals who take in home
appliances to try to ensure better air conditioning.
Ongoing problem
According to the president of the Portuguese Association of
Hospital Administrators, Xavier Barreto, in statements to Expresso, "some
hospitals have structural air conditioning problems because they were built
many years ago. For new constructions, the law establishes that there must be
an air conditioning system, but for the old ones, which are the majority, there
is no air conditioning as it was not obligatory when they were built”.
In turn, Ana Fernandes, from the Portuguese Association of
Cold and Air Conditioning Engineers, claims central air conditioning, mandatory in
hospitals built from 2008 onwards, is often inefficient, as is the case at the
Emergency Department of Hospital de São José, in Lisbon.
In homes, the situation is more serious, since the
recommendations of the Central Administration of Health Systems (ACSS) for
health units "leave out the Residential Structures for the Elderly"
and only requires the existence of air conditioning in the licensing of new
units "when all the ventilation and ventilation conditions of the spaces
are not guaranteed".
440 deaths in one day
According to CNN Portugal's calculations, between July 9 and
15, 2021, the country registered 1,990 deaths, a number that shot up 33% to
2,644 in the same period in 2022, the highest value since official records
began (2009).
In fact, over the course of four days, Portugal hit maximum
mortality for this time of year and the peak happened on July 14 with 440
deaths in a single day.
Rui Nogueira, former president of the Portuguese Association
of General and Family Medicine, explains that heat waves, and especially those
that last for several days, are particularly worrying for those who have heart,
respiratory and hypertension problems.
"Temperatures above 35 degrees are already difficult
for the elderly and sick, but above 40 degrees, as we have seen, is
overwhelming", concludes the doctor.