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Occupational heat strain in outdoor workers: A comprehensive review and meta-analysis

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posted on 2022-05-03, 09:00 authored by Leonidas G Ioannou, Josh Foster, Nathan B Morris, Jacob F Piil, George HavenithGeorge Havenith, Igor B Mekjavic, Glen P Kenny, Lars Nybo, Andreas D Flouris

The present comprehensive review (i) summarizes the current knowledge on the impacts of occupational heat stress on outdoor workers, (ii) provides a historical background on this issue, (iii) presents a meta-analysis of published data, (iv) explores inter-individual and intra-individual factors, (v) discusses the available heat mitigation strategies, (vi) estimates physical work capacity, labour productivity, and metabolic rate for the year 2030, and (vii) provides an overview of existing policy and legal frameworks on occupational heat exposure. Meta-analytic findings from 38 field studies that involved monitoring 2,409 outdoor workers across 41 jobs in 21 countries suggest that occupational heat stress increases the core (r = 0.44) and skin (r = 0.44) temperatures, as well as the heart rate (r = 0.38) and urine specific gravity (r = 0.13) of outdoor workers (all p < 0.05). Moreover, it diminishes the capacity of outdoor workers for manual labour (r = −0.82; p < 0.001) and is responsible for more than two thirds of the reduction in their metabolic rate. Importantly, our analysis shows that physical work capacity is projected to be highly affected by the ongoing anthropogenic global warming. Nevertheless, the metabolic rate and, therefore, labour productivity are projected to remain at levels higher than the workers’ physical work capacity, indicating that people will continue to work more intensely than they should to meet their financial obligations for food and shelter. In this respect, complementary measures targeting self-pacing, hydration, work-rest regimes, ventilated garments, and mechanization can be adopted to protect outdoor workers.

History

School

  • Design and Creative Arts

Department

  • Design

Published in

Temperature

Volume

9

Issue

1

Pages

67 - 102

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Taylor & Francis

Publisher statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Temperature on 26 Apr 2022, available at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/23328940.2022.2030634.

Acceptance date

2022-01-13

Publication date

2022-04-26

Copyright date

2022

ISSN

2332-8940

eISSN

2332-8959

Language

  • en

Depositor

Prof George Havenith. Deposit date: 29 April 2022

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