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Extreme heat can do more than make you sweat. According to accumulating research, it can also accelerate aging.
A study published Aug. 25 in the journal Nature Climate Change analyzed data from nearly 25,000 adults in Taiwan and found that people who were exposed to more extreme heat events aged faster than those who were protected from warm-weather days.
Another recent study, published in the journal Science Advances, yielded similar findings. Researchers found that ongoing exposure to heat over 80 degrees accelerated biological aging, which is how your body ages on the inside at the cellular level, regardless of how many birthdays you’ve had.
This might mean, for example, that instead of getting a specific health condition at a certain older age, it happens earlier, says Deborah Carr, director of the Center of Innovation in Social Science at Boston University, who studies heat and aging.
“[It] means you [have] more years of suffering, more years of demands on your caregiver,” Carr explains. It also means you may not have Medicare in place to properly care for any premature health problems that arise, she notes.
Heat’s impact on the aging process
If you’re living in an area with extreme heat for half the year, you could be even more prone to faster aging, the study found. In fact, for people living in hot climates, biological aging sped up nearly three years in some cases.
For the 2025 study in Science Advances, a team of researchers at the Leonard Davis School of Gerontology at the University of Southern California used different biological clock models to measure markers of aging in blood samples from 3,686 American adults, ages 56 and older. The researchers then compared each individual’s aging outcomes, measured by slight changes in their DNA, with their geographical heat index, considering heat and humidity.
Researchers categorized hot days as those that were 80 to 90 degrees, 90 to 103 degrees, and 103 to 124 degrees. They found that people who lived in areas that experienced more days of extreme heat were more likely to see greater increases in their biological age compared with people who experienced fewer hot days.
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