Researchers analyzed many existing studies to see if there is a link between high temperatures and body measurements like height and weight. The review included data from nearly 3 million people, mostly young children under five years old living in Sub-Saharan Africa. They looked at how temperature changes related to standard growth scores used by health professionals.
The main finding was that for each 1°C increase in average temperature, children's weight-for-height scores were slightly lower. Height-for-age scores also showed a small reduction. For adults, the picture was more complicated, with higher temperatures linked to both underweight and obesity in different studies. The research did not report on specific safety issues from the heat exposure itself.
It is important to be careful with these results. The studies in the review used different methods, which makes direct comparisons harder. The effect for any single child appears to be small. Most importantly, this type of study can only show a link or association between temperature and growth measures—it cannot prove that hotter weather directly causes changes in a child's weight or height.
Readers should understand this as early evidence that climate and health may be connected in new ways. The real-world takeaway is for public health planners, suggesting they might need to consider heat when creating programs to support child nutrition as global temperatures rise. For individuals, this review highlights a broad environmental factor to be aware of, not a reason for immediate personal alarm.