Occupational Heat Stress: Multi-Country Observations and Interventions

Author:

Ioannou Leonidas G.ORCID,Mantzios Konstantinos,Tsoutsoubi LydiaORCID,Nintou Eleni,Vliora MariaORCID,Gkiata Paraskevi,Dallas Constantinos N.,Gkikas Giorgos,Agaliotis Gerasimos,Sfakianakis Kostas,Kapnia Areti K.,Testa Davide J.ORCID,Amorim Tânia,Dinas Petros C.ORCID,Mayor Tiago S.,Gao ChuansiORCID,Nybo LarsORCID,Flouris Andreas D.ORCID

Abstract

Background: Occupational heat exposure can provoke health problems that increase the risk of certain diseases and affect workers’ ability to maintain healthy and productive lives. This study investigates the effects of occupational heat stress on workers’ physiological strain and labor productivity, as well as examining multiple interventions to mitigate the problem. Methods: We monitored 518 full work-shifts obtained from 238 experienced and acclimatized individuals who work in key industrial sectors located in Cyprus, Greece, Qatar, and Spain. Continuous core body temperature, mean skin temperature, heart rate, and labor productivity were collected from the beginning to the end of all work-shifts. Results: In workplaces where self-pacing is not feasible or very limited, we found that occupational heat stress is associated with the heat strain experienced by workers. Strategies focusing on hydration, work-rest cycles, and ventilated clothing were able to mitigate the physiological heat strain experienced by workers. Increasing mechanization enhanced labor productivity without increasing workers’ physiological strain. Conclusions: Empowering laborers to self-pace is the basis of heat mitigation, while tailored strategies focusing on hydration, work-rest cycles, ventilated garments, and mechanization can further reduce the physiological heat strain experienced by workers under certain conditions.

Funder

International Labour Organization

Horizon 2020

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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