Meteorological Factors: How the Air Changes, How Bodies Respond
Weather is not a fixed set of numbers on a forecast. It is a moving environment in which temperature, pressure, humidity, wind, light, and even subtle atmospheric forces change continuously, often unevenly, and sometimes abruptly. What matters most for the human body is rarely the daily average; it is the size, speed, duration, and direction of change. The same weather pattern may feel mild for one person and exhausting for another, depending on age, fitness, body composition, and chronic disease. This is why meteosensitivity cannot be understood only through static measurements. A body reacts to transitions, not just states. Rapid warming, sharp cooling, falling pressure, dry air, gusty winds, unstable light, and seasonal shifts can all create physiological stress, especially in infants, older adults, and people with cardiovascular , respiratory , or kidney disease . Temperature: Level, Direction, and Speed Temperature is the most familiar weather factor, but its biological eff...