FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE
FLORIDA'S ONLY JOINT COMMISSION-ACCREDITED URGENT CARE · ONE OF JUST 8 NATIONWIDE
Medically reviewed by Shane D. Naidoo, MD
Medical Director, TrufaMED Urgent Care & Concierge Medicine
Board-Certified, Emergency Medicine
Last reviewed: June 2026
Miami's summer heat is unforgiving and gets worse every year. Heat index days above 105°F are now routine from June through September. The clinical pattern we see at our Surfside urgent care follows a predictable curve: a string of normal days, a humid heat wave, and a wave of patients walking in with cramping, lightheadedness, nausea, and concerning core temperatures.
The two conditions to know are heat exhaustion and heat stroke. Heat exhaustion is uncomfortable but usually manageable in urgent care; heat stroke is a life-threatening emergency. Telling them apart fast matters. This is the cheat sheet our triage RNs use.
Heat exhaustion happens when your body is losing more fluid and electrolytes than it is taking in, but core temperature remains under control. The typical patient is a tourist or outdoor worker who has been in the sun for several hours without enough water, often after a hot Friday Marlins game, a beach day, or a long boat ride.
Symptoms include:
Treatment: get out of the heat, lie down with feet elevated, sip cold electrolyte solution if not vomiting, and apply cool compresses. Recovery typically occurs over thirty to ninety minutes. An IV with normal saline and electrolytes (our Rehydrate+ formula, $225) shortens recovery to roughly thirty minutes and is what we order most for heat exhaustion patients who walk into the clinic.
Heat stroke is when the body's temperature regulation has failed. Core temperature climbs above 104°F, sweating may stop, and the central nervous system starts to malfunction. Untreated, heat stroke can cause organ damage and death within hours.
Symptoms include:
This is a 911 call. Do not bring a suspected heat stroke patient to urgent care; call emergency services and begin cooling immediately. Move the patient out of the heat, remove excess clothing, and apply cold packs or wet sheets to the neck, armpits, and groin until paramedics arrive. Heat stroke patients need ER-level monitoring during cooling and often require hospital admission for organ function monitoring.
Some Miami populations are at materially higher risk:
When a patient walks in with suspected heat exhaustion, our protocol is:
Most heat exhaustion patients are discharged in under 90 minutes. The IV is the part that turns a four-hour afternoon of misery into a manageable evening.
No. Heat stroke is a 911 call. Urgent care is appropriate for heat exhaustion, where core temperature is under 103°F and the patient is mentally alert.
Our Rehydrate+ IV is $225. If you have insurance and the visit is billed as an urgent care evaluation, your standard copay applies.
Both, but if you have been sweating heavily for more than an hour, an electrolyte-containing drink is preferable. Plain water alone in large volumes after heavy sweating can dilute sodium dangerously.
Yes, particularly during preseason football and soccer practice. Pediatric heat illness is common in August. Coaches should monitor for fatigue, headache, and nausea and pull players promptly.