This paper discusses human thermoregulation and how this relates to health problems
during exposure to climatic stress. The heat exchange of the body with the environment is
described in terms of the heat balance equation which determines whether the body heats
up, remains at stable temperature, or cools. Inside the body the thermoregulatory control
aims at creating the right conditions of heat loss to keep the body temperature stable. In
the heat the main effector mechanism for this is sweating. The heat balance is affected by
air temperature, radiant temperature, humidity and wind speed as climatic parameters and
by activity rate, clothing insulation and sweat capacity as personal parameters. Heat
tolerance is discussed in the light of personal characteristics (age, gender, fitness,
acclimatisation, morphology and fat) indicating age and fitness as most important
predictors. Heat related mortality and morbidity are strongly linked to age.
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Citation
HAVENITH, G., 2005. Temperature regulation, heat balance and climatic stress. IN: Kirch, W., Menne, B. and Bertollini, R. (Eds.) Extreme Weather Events and Public Health Responses. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, pp. 69-80.