BOMBSHELL DATA: In a Warming World, Rising Cold Deaths Outnumber Heat Deaths 12 to 1

A new paper published in Current Problems in Cardiology takes a detailed look at how temperature—both hot and cold—affects mortality across the United States. The study, covering the period from 2000 to 2020, analyzes data from over 1,500 counties and more than 33 million deaths. Its goal is to estimate how many deaths are associated with “non-optimal” temperatures, and how social vulnerability influences those outcomes.

At first glance, the framing of the paper fits a familiar narrative: climate change is often linked to rising heat waves and concerns about increasing heat-related deaths. However, the actual findings paint a more nuanced—and in some ways contradictory—picture.

The most striking result is that cold weather remains by far the dominant temperature-related killer in the United States. The authors estimate that, on average, about 72,361 deaths per year are attributable to cold temperatures, compared to only about 6,129 deaths per year from heat.

In other words, cold-related mortality is roughly twelve times higher than heat-related mortality.

This alone challenges the common perception that warming temperatures will necessarily lead to a surge in deaths. If anything, the data suggest that cold remains the far more significant public health risk.

Even more surprising is the study’s observation that cold-related deaths have been increasing over time. According to the authors, cold-related mortality has risen by approximately 9% per year since 2000 in the United States. This trend runs counter to the expectation that a warming climate would reduce cold-related risks.

So how do the authors reconcile these findings with concerns about climate change?

One key concept introduced in the paper is the “minimum mortality temperature” (MMT), which represents the temperature at which the lowest death rates occur. In this study, the national average MMT is about 22.7°C (roughly 73°F), meaning that mortality increases when temperatures are either above or below this level.

Importantly, most days in most regions fall below this optimal temperature. That means a larger share of time—and therefore a larger share of deaths—is associated with cooler conditions rather than extreme heat. This helps explain why cold-related mortality dominates the statistics.

Another major focus of the paper is “social vulnerability.” The authors use an index that includes factors such as income, housing, access to healthcare, and demographic characteristics. They find that more vulnerable populations experience higher death rates from both heat and cold.

However, the increase is especially notable for cold exposure. Counties with higher social vulnerability not only have higher overall mortality rates, but also steeper increases in risk as temperatures drop. This suggests that socioeconomic conditions—such as poor housing, limited heating, or lack of access to medical care—play a critical role in determining outcomes.

This raises an important question: are temperature-related deaths primarily a climate problem, or a poverty and infrastructure problem?

The data in this study strongly point toward the latter. While temperature extremes matter, the ability to cope with those extremes appears to matter more. Populations with better resources, housing, and healthcare are less vulnerable—even when exposed to the same temperatures.

The paper also highlights that socially vulnerable counties tend to have slightly higher optimal temperatures (MMT), meaning they are more accustomed to warmer conditions. Yet despite this, they still suffer higher mortality from both heat and cold. This again underscores that adaptation and resilience are key factors.

From a policy perspective, the authors argue for “vulnerability-responsive public health strategies.” In plain terms, that means targeting assistance—such as heating, cooling, and healthcare access—to populations most at risk.

That conclusion is reasonable and well-supported by the data. However, it also shifts the emphasis away from climate change itself and toward local socioeconomic conditions. If cold deaths are twelve times more common than heat deaths, and if they are rising despite warming trends, then simply reducing global temperatures would not address the main driver of mortality.

There are also some limitations worth noting. The study uses an ecological, county-level approach, which means it cannot track individual exposures or behaviors. It also relies on statistical modeling to attribute deaths to temperature, rather than direct cause-of-death records. As with all such studies, the results depend on assumptions about how temperature influences mortality.

Additionally, the paper focuses on adults aged 25 to 84, excluding older populations who may be particularly vulnerable to temperature extremes. This could affect the overall estimates. Even with these caveats, the central findings are strong and consistent with previous research, such as the 2015 Lancet study

Bottom line: cold weather is a much larger contributor to mortality than heat, and social vulnerability plays a major role in determining outcomes.

In the broader climate debate, these results are significant. Much of the public discussion emphasizes the dangers of heat waves and rising temperatures. While those risks are real, this study suggests they are only part of the picture—and not the dominant part.

If policymakers are primarily concerned with saving lives, then addressing cold-related risks and improving resilience in vulnerable communities may yield far greater benefits than focusing exclusively on heat.

In short, the paper provides a useful reminder that climate and health are complex issues. The relationship between temperature and mortality is not a simple story of “warming equals more deaths.” Instead, it is shaped by a combination of environmental conditions, infrastructure, and social factors.

And for now, at least in the United States, the data show that cold—not heat—remains the bigger threat.

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Some Like It Hot
March 30, 2026 10:30 am

If you ask me, this “study” is beyond silly (“silly” is the word we use in my house, instead of “stupid”).

You might as well say, more people die at night instead ot the daytime, if 73F is the determining factor. By this standard, people in places like Singapore should celebrate, as they would be damn near immortal.

I agree with the cold vs. heat danger but, c’mon.

Scarecrow Repair
Reply to  Some Like It Hot
March 30, 2026 10:38 am

I disagree. I think that MMT concept has a lot of merit. Trying to pin it down to a tenth of a degree is silly, trying to assign a single MMT to every person or locale is silly, and there are a ton of other factors. But for any region, a single MMT can probably be calculated as they have done. Whether it’s useful, I doubt, since the climatologists won’t pay any heed to it.

SwedeTex
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
March 30, 2026 4:00 pm

They say all politics is local. Well, isn’t weather pretty much local? I mean Alaska has had an unusually cold winter and Hawaii one wet and warm. On average, they’re right on the money. That is why averages in “climate” are meaningless.

Mr.
Reply to  SwedeTex
March 30, 2026 5:44 pm

Absolutely right Swede Tex.

There are hundreds if not thousands of climates all around the world, all presenting their own weathers as they see fit according to the different physics drivers & influences in their locales.

Talking about “THE” climate is arrant nonsense.

Tom Johnson
Reply to  Scarecrow Repair
March 30, 2026 6:57 pm

I would agree that the precise value of the MMT is not very relevant. In most cases these days few deaths occur outside so the temperature is not a factor. In addition, the exposure to the trauma or pathogen that led to the fatality might have been many hours, days, or even years before the death. The MMT, just like the results of climate models might be interesting but is hardly useful.

March 30, 2026 10:43 am

In the U.K. cold weather mortality is significantly higher than warm weather mortality and 23 degrees Celsius is associated with summer.

2544 cold related deaths

(https://www.gov.uk/government/news/ukhsa-publishes-first-cold-mortality-report)

1311 heat related deaths
(https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/heat-mortality-monitoring-report-england-2024/heat-mortality-monitoring-report-england-2024)

Bill Toland
Reply to  JohnC
March 30, 2026 6:27 pm

The British Government figures for cold related deaths are a gross underestimate of reality.

“Each year in England and Wales, there were on average nearly 800 excess deaths associated with heat and over 60,500 associated with cold between 2000 and 2019”,

https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/newsevents/news/2022/both-heat-and-cold-increase-risk-death-england-and-wales-rates-vary-across

Rud Istvan
March 30, 2026 11:08 am

There are a host of reasons why cold season deaths significantly exceed hot season seasons deaths—by a lot. Here, by 12x.
To give just one example. Flu peaks in winter and is minimal in summer. There are two reasons.

  1. People are indoors more in winter to spread and catch flu.
  2. The flu virus aerosolized more easily in dry indoor winter air much more easily than in humid summer air. That means it remains airborne in winter for much longer for people to inhale it.

And flu still kills, especially immunocompromised and elderly. And the flu vaccine doesn’t really help, because even in a good year it is at best only about 70% effective, while in a bad year (this just past winter) it is under 50% effective. This past winter CDC now reports 23000 flu deaths.

Junkgirl
Reply to  Rud Istvan
March 30, 2026 11:28 am

Per study, last years flu shot was minus effective. The year before barely hit placebo effect. If you got a shot, and didn’t get the flu you can thank your own functioning natural immune system. Unless you got Covid jabs. Each one is harming your immune system, among other bad things.

Colin Belshaw
Reply to  Junkgirl
March 30, 2026 3:23 pm

Vitamin D – I haven’t had a cold since 2020.

Reply to  Colin Belshaw
March 30, 2026 4:22 pm

how much do you take?

Rud Istvan
Reply to  Colin Belshaw
March 30, 2026 6:30 pm

Someone who has deeply studied this—not an MD. The D3 MDR is 800 IU. Most supplements provide 1000 because of bioavailability limitations (D needs fats for absorption). A safe supplement is another 1000IU, taken as a liquid gel capsule providing fats. More is potentially dangerous.
My long term significant other proved clinically D deficient, despite living on the Fort Lauderdale beach. Reason was her sunscreen /coverup. The above was her doc’s ultimate recommendation. Worked for years.

Tom Halla
March 30, 2026 11:11 am

But of course only warming matters. Why?

mleskovarsocalrrcom
March 30, 2026 11:18 am

Like the AGW meme correlation doesn’t prove causation but the fact is more people die related to cold than heat. Many more, over 10 times more.

March 30, 2026 11:32 am

“This alone challenges the common perception that warming temperatures will necessarily lead to a surge in deaths.”

“This trend runs counter to the expectation that a warming climate would reduce cold-related risks.”

A bit of a contradiction in your intepretation. If cold related deaths are going up despite warmer winters. why assume a warming workd will not increase overall temperature related deaths?

“According to the authors, cold-related mortality has risen by approximately 9% per year since 2000 in the United States.”

That seems very high. Do they explain what that figure actually means in the paper? If it means there are now 3 times as many people dying each winter than 20 years ago I would doubt that has much to do with climate change.

Colin Belshaw
Reply to  Bellman
March 30, 2026 3:29 pm

So, we must forgive someone who has a brain-frozen predicament . . . there not being any point in announcing real-world observations that cold-related deaths are 12x greater than warm-related deaths.
And that means there are a whole bunch of people out there who are . . . totally and utterly stupid.

Reply to  Colin Belshaw
March 30, 2026 4:51 pm

Pardon?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bellman
March 31, 2026 9:21 am

You did not read, nor did you go to the reference in the article discussed.
It is not 3 times as many people.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 31, 2026 10:12 am

I did go to the article, but it’s behind a paywall. That’s why I asked if they explained the figure.

The exact words in the introduction is

In fact, cold related deaths in the US have increased by 9% per year over the past two decades.

Taking that at face value you have an increase of 9% per year over 20 years. which would mean a total increase of 180%, that is almost a three fold increase in deaths.

I suspect they actually mean they are calculating deaths per year. and that figure has risen by a total of 9% over 20 years. But it’s an ambigous statement, and if it is 9% over 20 years, I doubt it’s significant.

They also say this is due to some extreme cold spells in recent years, not due to winters getting warmer.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Bellman
March 31, 2026 12:32 pm

+180% is not a 3 fold increase. It is a tad less than 2 fold increase. Your prior post was not a 3x increase, but 3x rate. A bit of difference.

The line following your quote is the key.

Start with:
So how do the authors reconcile these findings with concerns about climate change?
And read from there. It was explained.

I went to look since it is an ambiguous statement.
The reference used indicates an increase of 109% over the interval. Or double today than in ~ 2019.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 31, 2026 2:51 pm

+180% is not a 3 fold increase.

I disagree. It’s a 3-fold increase, not an increase by 3-times.

There has been a threefold increase in inflation ( = inflation is three times what it was before)

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/-fold

But as there is some ambiguity, let’s just say it would mean deaths had tripled.

The reference used indicates an increase of 109% over the interval. Or double today than in ~ 2019.

Hos does that relate to 9% per year over two decades? The paper is talking about the period 2000-2020, not from 2019 to today.

1saveenergy
March 30, 2026 12:49 pm

[ “BOMBSHELL DATA:” ]
Why ???
We’ve known about this for years.
72,361 deaths per year are attributable to cold temperatures, compared to only about 6,129 deaths per year from heat.

[ “And for now, at least in the United States, the data show that cold—not heat—remains the bigger threat.” ]

No, deaths from poverty-related illness in the USA are an even bigger threat.

A 2023 study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association found that cumulative poverty of 10 or more years is the fourth leading risk factor for mortality in the United States, associated with nearly 300,000 deaths annually.

And in the UK …
Marie Curie’s third report into the prevalence of deaths in poverty found that more than 100,000 people died in poverty across the UK, and an even higher number – over 120,000 – died in fuel poverty. ( thanks in part to the green blob )
https://www.mariecurie.org.uk/document/dying-in-poverty-report-2025

rovingbroker
Reply to  1saveenergy
March 30, 2026 3:24 pm

Many years ago, a physician-friend told me stories of his time working in a Midwest US emergency room. In winter they had many “indigent” patients who arrived suffering from the cold and subsequently lost limbs and/or died from the cold. “Sleeping under a bridge” was often involved.

Mr.
Reply to  1saveenergy
March 30, 2026 6:05 pm

where do all the drugs overdose deaths feature in all this?

1saveenergy
Reply to  Mr.
March 31, 2026 1:13 am

Lower than poverty; Higher than temperature.

USA
Over 105,000 people die from drug overdoses in a year.
https://drugabusestatistics.org/drug-overdose-deaths/

UK
In England and Wales, 5,565 deaths related to drug poisoning were registered in 2024, the equivalent of 93.9 deaths per million.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsrelatedtodrugpoisoninginenglandandwales/2024registrations

Edward Katz
March 30, 2026 1:56 pm

It seems to me that Britain’s The Lancet ran a study like this a number of years ago and arrived at the same result. Now under-the-table payments from alarmist groups are persuading the media to say the opposite, another certain sign that the climate crisis crowd is losing the fight.

Bob
March 30, 2026 2:10 pm

Here is the thing, the solution to excess deaths caused by extreme hot or cold temperatures couldn’t be easier. Abundant and affordable energy. It doesn’t have a damn thing to do with man adding CO2 to the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels. By using fossil fuels we protect ourselves from the extremes. Wind and solar are neither abundant or affordable, they are not abundant because they are not affordable. Not to mention that they can’t support a modern society.

Bruce Cobb
March 30, 2026 2:28 pm

The only thing the fight against the Climate Boogeyman accomplishes is to destroy wealth, which hurts the middle-class, and especially poor people, making them more vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the weather.

2hotel9
March 31, 2026 4:15 am

How much of my tax dollars was pissed away to simply state the obvious?

youcantfixstupid
March 31, 2026 6:18 am

It took a study (likely well funded) to conclude that the poor and homeless are more likely to die of exposure to the elements…hardly earth shattering news…and correlation isn’t causation…

Bill Parsons
March 31, 2026 11:54 pm

Cold-related deaths increasing in the U.S.? This, if true, would suggest a rising poverty rate. I don’t think that is the case. Instead,

U.S. life expectancy has experienced a net increase over the last 30 yearsrising from roughly 75.8 years in 1995 to a record high of 79.0–81.4 years by 2024. (AI Overview)

Although all-cause mortality likely increases in winter months, the assertion that cold deaths are on the increase over the last generation is probably not true. Standards of living in the U.S. are generally improving as they are around the world. Green efforts notwithstanding, technologies fostered by fossil fuels are benefitting people in all walks of life, and that means the cold (sunless) winters are becoming less of a threat, as are the protracted summer months. From an Alex Epstein interview:

Bill Parsons
Reply to  Bill Parsons
March 31, 2026 11:56 pm

See cold and hot death mortality figures in a graph at 18:45.