Doctors, lawyers want B.C. to track injuries after record heat wave
VANCOUVER — Two groups focused on environmental issues are calling on the British Columbia government to come up with a plan to track “heat dome injuries” following record-setting temperatures that are also linked with 570 deaths in the province over a one-week period.
Representatives of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment and the West Coast Environmental Law Association said thousands of people across the province sought medical help for conditions like heat stroke, dehydration and even brain injury but there’s no way to track the extent of the problem.
Doctors submit a billing and diagnostic code based on a patient’s condition so they can be paid by the province, but no code exists for illness related to heat waves.
Dr. Melissa Lem, incoming president of the physicians’ group, said she was using a code for headache for some of her patients suffering from the effects of heat in late June, but it didn’t include symptoms linked to temperatures hitting 31.7 C in Vancouver and into the high 40s elsewhere in B.C.