45°C And Climbing: What The IMD's Heatwave Warning Means For Your Health

The thermometer at Safdarjung hit 45°C this week. In Ayanagar, South Delhi, one of the city's most heat-vulnerable pockets, it was even worse. And if you stepped outside between noon and four in the afternoon, your body already knew what the numbers confirmed: this April is different.

Delhi and its NCR, including Noida, Gurugram, and Ghaziabad, are currently in an extreme heatwave, with temperatures peaking between 43°C and 45°C, driven by dry northwesterly winds and 48 hours of relentless clear skies. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has placed the region under an Orange Alert, meaning the heat is no longer merely uncomfortable, it is a health risk that demands action.

heatwave-in-Delhi
Photo Credit: ANI

A Heatwave That Arrived Too Early

The 2026 heatwave has arrived earlier than usual, with extreme temperatures building in April - weeks before India's peak summer typically begins. That early onset is part of a worrying longer trend. Maximum temperatures recorded in Delhi stood at 38-40°C in April 2020, rose to 42-44°C in 2021, and peaked at 45-47°C in 2023.

The Confusing Part: Storms Are Coming Too

Even as Delhi bakes, the IMD's national forecast tells a starkly different story for much of the country. Parts of northwest India, including Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh, are expected to receive light to moderate rainfall with thunderstorms and gusty winds reaching 30-50 kmph.

A new Western Disturbance has established itself over northwest India, creating what forecasters are calling a "split weather" pattern, searing afternoons in the plains, thunder and rain rolling in from the hills. Hot and humid conditions are also expected across coastal and eastern regions, including Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Andhra Pradesh. For Delhi, any rain that arrives is expected to be brief. Relief is expected to be temporary and uneven, with temperatures likely to fluctuate in the days that follow.

What This Heat Does To The Body

heatwave-exhaustion
Photo Credit: Freepik

The IMD has been explicit: intense heat causes heat exhaustion, marked by heavy sweating, dizziness, and cramps, and, in severe cases, heat stroke, in which body temperature rises above 40°C, sweating stops, and confusion sets in. Heat stroke is a medical emergency.

Vulnerable groups, including children, the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions, have been advised to take extra precautions, with the IMD stating that "early awareness and preventive action are critical in reducing heat-related illnesses."

What Delhi's Government Is Doing

Delhi CM Rekha Gupta has directed the strict implementation of the Heat Wave Action Plan 2026, using satellite data to identify high-risk thermal zones, including Ayanagar and Najafgarh. The plan includes ORS distribution, cool rooms at hospitals, and a ban on outdoor construction work between 12 noon and 3 PM during severe heatwave conditions.

Over 30 hospitals have established dedicated cool rooms for heatwave patients, and 330 ambulances have been deployed round-the-clock across the city. Power discoms have been warned about outages, as electricity demand may exceed 9,000 MW.

Bottomline

Health experts advise minimising outdoor activity during the hottest hours, staying hydrated consistently, even without feeling thirsty, and watching for early warning signs like dizziness, fatigue, or excessive sweating. This is not a typical April. The heatwave gripping Delhi in 2026 is arriving earlier, peaking harder, and staying longer than previous years, and the window to act on it is right now, not when the temperature climbs further.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

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