Wet season forecast northern territory north Queensland and NSW (10%) warm and humid and south Queensland and NSW (10%) dry, with a high on the way (75%) for the remainder of the month. A low of 48.0°C is expected at the end of the day.
Forecast locations and times for Sunday 15 June
The Australian Capital Territory (ACT)
Winds from the south-west are expected to carry the most moisture from the southeast, with the southeast and south-east being wetter than the central and north-east.
Temperatures in the central and west (74° to 75°C) are very warm, with some locations seeing below 20°C.
The high is 74.5°C and the low is 12.4°C for Sydney and the ACT.
The low will probably remain below the 15°C standard for most parts of the state.
South-east Queensland and NSW
The west is relatively warm with warm breezes from the east and east of the Central Coast towards the south.
Temperatures are expected to fall into the high to low 40°C area for most parts of the state.
South-eastern New South Wales and Tasmania
Most high temperature days are in July or August and in August usually windchill is not as good as it is in April, as this can result in longer days.
Most of the high temperature days are very warm during the summer months, and they are usually hot (80°C+) in August and October and below the standard 15°C for most parts of the year.
Some regions have hot and humid days during August and October that can make it difficult for people to reach a suitable safe level of shelter, although a good weather warning is issued in all circumstances.
East of the Hunter, low and low-temperature days are rare during the summer months.
This is mainly due to the conditions on the coast that are not suitable for living or travelling out on. However, it could also be because of the wet season coming up, particularly in September and October, which will affect areas in the east of NSW.
Northern Tasmania and the Great Southern
Northern Tasmania sees the highest number of high temperatures at these times of the year. The hottest temperature is on Tuesday 18 June at 27.4°C, and the lowest at just 7.8°C.
The low is 7.6°C.
The high is 25.4°C in the Hunter region of north-west Tasmania, and 24.6°C in the East of the Hunter.
The high will probably stay below the 15°C standard until September.
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Indonesian bird flu victims brother dies, wife survives on frozen island
New York (CNN) -- As the temperature inside the freezer at the National Institutes of Health swelled to a temperature of 40 degrees Fahrenheit (11 degrees Celsius) in January, some of those suffering from the flu would have felt a little chilly -- particularly on a winter's night -- but on January 7, two family members did not.
A 26-year-old woman died of the flu after experiencing a heat stroke while watching "24," a Disney film about a young, struggling artist who finds her way to the New York City creative arts school.
That's how Janay DeMey, 32, described the flu epidemic of the 1990s when she contracted it from two sick relatives after their boyfriend came down with it.
The couple, along with six others, all have succumbed to the virus, but DeMey, who lived in New York with her husband, said her heart breaks for the friends she lost as they struggled to get back to normal.
"If I had not done what I had to do to try to raise a family, I could have been alone in that closet," DeMey told CNN. "Not one of us is out there right now, but if all of us had done what I had to do, we wouldn't be where we are now."
Since 2003, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates 5.9 million Americans have been sickened by what the U.S. health care system has labeled "flu," mainly because of medical care errors in handling or administering medicine to infected people. In 2012, the average age of first flu symptoms was 26.6 years, and that same year was second only to the last flu season, which started in 2001.
It was the sixth year that the CDC recorded an outbreak of H1N1.
But last week's influenza virus spread beyond H1N1, and it began to spread into other regions of Asia, bringing with it several cases across Southeast Asia, particularly Vietnam and Japan. That's a worrisome development, especially since flu epidemics are not contagious. It means a person who may have been infected could catch flu and end up in an emergency department, not knowing it's a virus.
The virus' emergence also marks the latest step in a rapidly changing global health care system, including widespread vaccination programs in developed countries.
"We're just now seeing the first symptoms of a vaccine we've never had before, and that's a good indicator that we've just gotten to a point of the vaccines getting into this much larger number of people in these countries, and this is not just an island disease that we've seen with H1N1 before," said Dr. Andrew Ko