
Heat wave blamed for 42 Toronto emergency room visits, public health says
Toronto Public Health says it recorded 42 heat-related emergency department visits during the heat wave that gripped much of Ontario earlier this week.
The heat wave delivered dangerously high temperatures and humidity to many parts of southwestern Ontario, with Toronto setting a new June 23 temperature record when the mercury hit 36 C.
A public health spokesperson says the number of weather-related ER visits to Toronto hospitals over the three-day heat wave is consistent with the health risks of heat exposure, 'particularly for vulnerable populations.'
Toronto Paramedic Services say they saw a 'slight increase' in overall call volume from Sunday to Tuesday, but they are unable to track how many calls are directly related to heat even though it may be a contributing factor.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
Ottawa also set a new June 23 heat record when the temperature there topped out at over 35 C.
Story continues below advertisement
Ottawa Paramedic Service said on Wednesday that it had responded to 14 calls directly related to heat since Saturday, with all but one patients in stable condition.
They say an elderly man with dementia was found in a backyard suffering from heat stroke on Monday, and was stabilized before he was taken to hospital in critical condition.
The Office of the Chief Coroner didn't have information about any recent heat-related deaths in the province, saying they are difficult to track accurately.
'It is very challenging to determine with accuracy whether heat was a direct factor in causing a death,' spokesperson Stephanie Rea said in an email. 'In many cases, a person may present to a hospital for a pre-existing condition exacerbated by the heat.'
Rea said only accidental deaths that are directly related to heat, such as hyperthermia or dehydration, are reported to the coroner for investigation.
While the heat warning officially lifted Wednesday in many parts of the province, relief is expected to be short-lived as Environment Canada forecasts temperatures will climb again to the high 20s starting Friday for parts of southwestern Ontario.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
5 hours ago
- Global News
First-of-its kind urban flower farm in Montreal fuelled by sibling love
Montreal's first cut flower green care farm is not only growing beautiful blooms, it's also blossoming bonds between people with and without intellectual disabilities. The new project was born out of the love between a former medical ethicist and her neurodivergent big brother. 'We feel really, really good about it,' said Posy Flower Farm founder Lucy Wade, standing next to her older brother Harris. 'I think for me, it's a bit like coming home.' Wade created Posy Flower Farm in Montreal this spring on a small plot of land at the Verdun borough's municipal greenhouse. Where the flowers are now growing, dahlias, cosmos and zinnias among them, not long ago, there was just grass and weeds on the 'unloved' tract. 'It was a huge job. It just took a little elbow grease, eh Harris?' she said to her brother. Story continues below advertisement Harris lives with an intellectual disability. He works regular shifts at the flower farm, along with new employee, Ellis, who is also is also neurodivergent. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy She's hoping the green care farm becomes a place where neurotypical people can not only shop for flowers, but also gain a better understanding of the realities of people living with intellectual disabilities. 'The idea is that if we can put people in the community who don't have disabilities in contact with something beautiful, where they can also see people with disabilities doing something they value and contributing in a very real way to the functioning of this business,' Wade explained. Green care farming is when people with medical conditions, including intellectual disabilities, get major benefits from working outdoors, surrounded by people. When people with disabilities age out of school, society offers little support for them or their loved ones. 'They end up kind of retreating away from society and being more at home,' she said. Wade decided to leave her career as a medical ethicist at the Jewish General Hospital to create an environment where her brother and others with disabilities could thrive. Before being an ethicist, she studied sperm whales in the Maritimes as a marine biologist. 'I do mulch. I do watering, and we sell a bunch of flowers,' Harris said. Story continues below advertisement Wade said she felt in her work life, she had to 'compartmentalize' a major part of herself: being the sister of a brother with a disability. She wanted to bring both sides of her to the forefront at the flower farm. 'I think this is something that a lot of siblings of people with disabilities will understand,' she said. 'You have your family life and the life where inclusion of people with disabilities is completely natural and normal. And then you have your other life where people don't understand that. And you pick and choose who you share that with.' For the full story, watch the video above.


Global News
5 hours ago
- Global News
New Brunswick shelters see increased demand during warm summer months
Some New Brunswick homeless shelters are reporting their busiest summer yet, at a time when many unhoused people ordinarily choose to stay outside in the warmer weather. In Fredericton, a building at the exhibition grounds that was only meant to be an out-of-the-cold shelter until mid-April is instead staying open for the foreseeable future. 'Normally people sort of go out into the world, and spend their summers in tents or out and about or wherever they can be without rules and live their life and that's their choice to do so,' said Warren Maddox, the executive director of Fredericton Homeless Shelters. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'What we found this year is that our usage is way up.' For Maddox, increasing drug toxicity is playing a big role in the summer increase. 'The people are scared. They don't have a place to go where they can be safe at night,' he said. Story continues below advertisement In Saint John, Ben Appleby with the Outflow Ministry is also reporting a record number of people accessing their shelter. 'We've seen basically double since (20)22-23 in individuals experiencing homelessness for at least one day in a year,' said Appleby. The shift is seen provincewide, according to numbers provided by New Brunswick's social development department, which shows 60 per cent of out-of-the-cold beds in the province have stayed available for the summer. 'We saw this coming, to be honest; that's why we were really being proactive… really looking at how can we look at increasing capacity in shelters as a response to what's coming,' said Social Development Minister Cindy Miles. She says the issue is complex, meaning every community will need different supports. For more on this story, watch the video above.


CTV News
12 hours ago
- CTV News
Toronto Public Health seeking person who came in contact with bat that may have rabies
FILE -Toronto Public Health's offices at Dundas and Victoria St. in Toronto on Monday, August 21, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Cole Burston Toronto Public Health (TPH) is looking for a person who came in contact with a bat that may have rabies earlier this week. TPH says it has learned about an injured bat exhibiting symptoms of rabies and that the animal was physically handled at the north entrance to 88-100 Harbour St. on Wednesday around 9:24 p.m. 'Rabies is a viral infection that affects the nervous system of mammals including humans. Rabies can lead to death if it is left untreated before symptoms appear,' TPH says. The virus is spread through the saliva of an infected animal. The person is believed to be standing at five-foot-eight with a beard and was seen wearing eyeglasses, a black T-shirt, black pants and white sneakers. TPH says the person was also holding a black water bottle. The local health unit is urging the person to immediately call 416-338-7600 between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday to Friday or 311 after hours. TPH says the person should ask to speak to the healthy environments manager on call.