Affiliation:
1. 1Occupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health, Richmond, California, USA; email: robert.harrison@cdph.ca.gov
2. 2Heluna Health, City of Industry, California, USA
Abstract
Climate change poses a significant occupational health hazard. Rising temperatures and more frequent heat waves are expected to cause increasing heat-related morbidity and mortality for workers across the globe. Agricultural, construction, military, firefighting, mining, and manufacturing workers are at particularly high risk for heat-related illness (HRI). Various factors, including ambient temperatures, personal protective equipment, work arrangements, physical exertion, and work with heavy equipment may put workers at higher risk for HRI. While extreme heat will impact workers across the world, workers in low- and middle-income countries will be disproportionately affected. Tracking occupational HRI will be critical to informing prevention and mitigation strategies. Renewed investment in these strategies, including workplace heat prevention programs and regulatory standards for indoor and outdoor workers, will be needed. Additional research is needed to evaluate the effectiveness of interventions in order to successfully reduce the risk of HRI in the workplace.
Reference140 articles.
1. Heat stress and strain: TLV® physical agents 7th edition documentation (2017);TLVs and BEIs with 7th Edition Documentation, CD-ROM,2017
2. Workplace heat protections across the globe;Nat. Resour. Def. Counc. Blog,2021
3. Verifying experimental wet bulb globe temperature hindcasts across the United States;Geohealth,2022
4. Increasing heat-stress inequality in a warming climate;Earth's Future,2022
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献