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So, by extrapolation, it's indicating that as temperatures rise and become more common, hypo-etringia will increase as well. The 2024 study in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology showed that research in 24 countries, had research in 24 countries across the Midwest economy, found that when temperatures were highly, were high, significantly, even associated with low sodium levels. And the conclusion was, cases are likely to rise as global temperatures go up, and that extreme heat events will be secondary to climate change. Over the last 12 months, Germany has witnessed almost double the days in extreme heat. It would have, if the world was without climate change, as was written in the World Weather Association's contribution to Red Cross's Climate Center and the Climate Central.
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