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Heat Emergency Prep: 10 Life-Saving Steps to Stay Cool During Heat Waves and Power Outages

Extreme heat sneaks up faster than most emergencies — and when the grid falters, a few bad hours can become life-threatening. Don’t wait until the mercury climbs: use these proven, low-cost prepping moves to keep your family safe, cool, and functioning when summer turns vicious.

Beat Deadly Heat: 10 Prep Moves That Save Lives

Know the danger signs — act fast

Heat exhaustion and heat stroke aren’t the same — and confusing them costs lives. Look for heavy sweating, dizziness, nausea, weakness and cool, clammy skin in exhaustion; heat stroke brings hot, dry skin, confusion, rapid heartbeat and loss of consciousness. If someone shows signs of heat stroke, cool them immediately and get medical help — this is an emergency. Teach everyone in your household the signs and run quick drills so response is automatic when temps spike.

Prep your home for a heat wave or outage

Build a “cool box” strategy: choose the coolest interior room, close blinds on sun-facing windows, and set up battery or solar fans aimed at windows to pull air through at night. Stock frozen water bottles (they act as ice packs and slow-melt cooling), blackout curtains, reflective window film, and inexpensive shade cloth for porches. If you rely on a generator, practice safe operation and have fuel stored legally and safely. Keep a stash of small, portable power solutions — USB battery packs, 12V fans, and a charged power station can keep critical devices and fans running during grid failures.

Hydration, clothing, and first aid tips that actually work

Hydration beats gimmicks: sip water before you feel thirsty and add electrolytes when sweating heavily. Avoid alcohol and heavy meals during peak heat. Wear light, loose, moisture-wicking clothes and a wide-brim hat when outside. For first aid, move the person to shade, cool the skin with wet towels or ice packs at neck/armpits/groin, and monitor breathing and mental status. Prepare a small heat-emergency kit: electrolyte mixes, instant cold packs, a thermometer, and clear instructions on when to call EMS.

Plan, check, and help your neighbors

Make a simple heat plan: identify vulnerable people, set check-in times, and map safe cooling locations (friends, libraries, community centers). Practice rotating responsibilities so someone always checks on elderly or mobility-impaired neighbors during heat events. Revisit your plan each season and keep a short printed checklist in your binder — when power and cell service drop, a paper plan wins. A little prep now prevents crises later.

Written by Keith Jacobs

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