Ten deaths linked to cold this winter season in Cook County, Illinois, have been reported. A 62-year-old man is the latest victim, whose body was found on January 19th at 5 W. 69th St., according to the Cook County medical examiner's office.
Zachary Armistead died Thursday morning from complications of hypothermia with cold exposure as a contributing factor, and his death has been deemed accidental. This marks the tenth such fatality in the county this winter season, at least partly due to the cold.
The list of previous victims includes 86-year-old Irene Hyzny, who succumbed to cold exposure at home on January 29th; Mary Savisky, an 81-year-old woman who died from cold exposure with heart disease as a secondary cause in her home on January 19th; and a 23-year-old Oak Forest man who died of alcohol use and cocaine toxicity with hypothermia due to environmental cold exposure.
Four more deaths have been linked to the cold: a 90-year-old man who perished from environmental cold exposure, a 38-year-old Chicago man whose death was partly attributed to hypothermia and cold exposure; a 68-year-old woman who died of hypothermia, cold exposure, and heart disease; and a 54-year-old Des Plaines man whose cause of death was listed as hypothermia due to environmental cold exposure.
City officials are urging residents to stay safe in the cold by staying indoors when possible, covering cracks around doors, shutting off water pipes if they freeze, and wearing loose-fitting layers while outside.
Zachary Armistead died Thursday morning from complications of hypothermia with cold exposure as a contributing factor, and his death has been deemed accidental. This marks the tenth such fatality in the county this winter season, at least partly due to the cold.
The list of previous victims includes 86-year-old Irene Hyzny, who succumbed to cold exposure at home on January 29th; Mary Savisky, an 81-year-old woman who died from cold exposure with heart disease as a secondary cause in her home on January 19th; and a 23-year-old Oak Forest man who died of alcohol use and cocaine toxicity with hypothermia due to environmental cold exposure.
Four more deaths have been linked to the cold: a 90-year-old man who perished from environmental cold exposure, a 38-year-old Chicago man whose death was partly attributed to hypothermia and cold exposure; a 68-year-old woman who died of hypothermia, cold exposure, and heart disease; and a 54-year-old Des Plaines man whose cause of death was listed as hypothermia due to environmental cold exposure.
City officials are urging residents to stay safe in the cold by staying indoors when possible, covering cracks around doors, shutting off water pipes if they freeze, and wearing loose-fitting layers while outside.