2022
DOI: 10.1007/s41449-022-00303-z
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Do one-hour exposures provide a valid assessment of physiological heat strain?

Abstract: For time- and cost-efficient heat stress assessment procedures at workplaces or in experimental studies, short-time measurement periods (e.g. 1 h) are sometimes employed in lieu of whole shift observations assuming that the short time period will provide valid figures of equilibrium physiological responses. We studied the influence of exposure duration on physiological heat strain considering the modifying effects of clothing and heat acclimation using a database of 564 climatic chamber exposures performed by … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…as is common in many industrial sectors) however, further investigation is warranted to confirm the long-term impacts of heat stress exposure on physical work capacity across a range of working populations. Finally, Kampmann and Bröde ( 2022 ) compared indicators of heat strain during the first and third hour of work at a constant workload, performed in a range of climates. They observed significantly lower heat strain (heart rate, rectal temperature) estimates based on the first hour data versus the third hour, and warn that using short studies to develop heat strain prediction models risks underestimating the heat strain for a full work shift, even at moderate heat loads.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…as is common in many industrial sectors) however, further investigation is warranted to confirm the long-term impacts of heat stress exposure on physical work capacity across a range of working populations. Finally, Kampmann and Bröde ( 2022 ) compared indicators of heat strain during the first and third hour of work at a constant workload, performed in a range of climates. They observed significantly lower heat strain (heart rate, rectal temperature) estimates based on the first hour data versus the third hour, and warn that using short studies to develop heat strain prediction models risks underestimating the heat strain for a full work shift, even at moderate heat loads.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our recent PWC models (work capacity in the heat expressed as the percentage of the total work possible in a cool climate) were developed from a large dataset that captured a wide range of heat stress severities. However, the 1-h work duration of the experiments may underestimate the physiological strain and impact associated with extended heat stress exposure (Kampmann and Bröde, 2022) and, thus, the work capacity loss in industry, where typical work shifts often James W Smallcombe and Josh Foster contributed equally to the preparation of the manuscript and is co-first author. last 6-8 h. For example, data derived from extended-duration occupational heat exposures indicate that workers often struggle to fully replace thermoregulatory sweat losses with adequate water consumption during the day, particularly when sweat rates are high (Kalkowsky and Kampmann, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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