| Literature DB >> 27891237 |
Adam Walker1, Rodney Pope2, Robin Marc Orr2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Firefighting is a highly stressful occupation with unique physical challenges, apparel and environments that increase the potential for dehydration. Dehydration leaves the firefighter at risk of harm to their health, safety and performance. The purpose of this review was to critically analyse the current literature investigating the impact of fighting 'live' fires on firefighter hydration.Entities:
Keywords: Dehydration; Firefighting; Rural fire; Structural fire; Wildland fire
Year: 2016 PMID: 27891237 PMCID: PMC5111227 DOI: 10.1186/s40557-016-0152-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Occup Environ Med ISSN: 2052-4374
Search strategy: Databases used, search terms, and filters applied
| Database | Search terms | Filters |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | (firefighter [Mesh] OR firefighter* OR “fire service” OR “fire fighter*” OR “fire and rescue personnel”) AND (hydration OR dehydration OR rehydration OR physiological* OR thermoregulation OR “thermal strain” OR temperature OR “water turnover” OR “fluid intake” OR drinking OR “fluid consumption”) | 2000–2015 |
| CINAHL | (firefighter [Mesh] OR firefighter* OR “fire service” OR “fire fighter*” OR “fire and rescue personnel”) AND (hydration OR dehydration OR rehydration OR physiological* OR thermoregulation OR “thermal strain” OR temperature OR “water turnover” OR “fluid intake” OR drinking OR “fluid consumption”) | 2000–2015 |
| ProQuest | (firefighter* OR “fire service” OR “fire fighter*” OR “fire and rescue personnel”) AND (hydration OR dehydration OR rehydration OR physiological* OR thermoregulation OR “thermal strain” OR temperature OR “water turnover” OR “fluid intake” OR drinking OR “fluid consumption”) | 2000–2015 |
| Peer reviewed | ||
| Terms in abstract | ||
| Google Scholar | (firefighter* OR fire service OR fire fighter* OR fire and rescue personnel) AND (hydration OR dehydration OR rehydration OR physiological response OR thermoregulation OR body temperature OR water turnover OR fluid intake OR drinking OR fluid consumption) | 2000–2015 |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of the literature screening and selection processes
Key data, findings and critical appraisal scores (CAS) and methodological quality ratings of included articles
| Study | Participants | Outcome measure(s) | Intervention(s) | Major Findings | CAS (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuddy et al. [ | 15 Hot Spot firefighters | Water turnover | Live wildland fire suppression over 3 days of work shifts (11.4 ± 0.7 h/day) (hiking, line dragging, laying hose, chain sawing, clearing brush, lookout, and scouting) | No significant change ( | 54 |
| Raines et al. [ | 32 firefighters (31 male,1 female) | Plasma Osm | PR group consumed 500 mL fluid bolus pre shift and ad libitum remainder of shift | No difference between groups in total fluid intake (3.4 ± 1.6 L AD, 3.7 ± 2.9 L PR, | 57 |
| Horn et al. [ | 35 career, volunteer and industrial firefighters (31 male, 4 female) | Nude BW | 3 h live fire training exercise in specialised training building. 3–4 evolutions lasting 15–25 min, separated by 10–15 min (obtain water, advance hoses, extinguish fires, forcible entries, search and rescue and ventilation tasks) | Significant BW loss of 1.1 ± 0.8 kg ( | 61 |
| Holsworth et al. [ | 9 volunteer firefighters | HCT | 2 × 30 min strenuous live structural fires | Significant ( | 61 |
| Smith et al. [ | 11 male professional firefighters | HCT | 3 trials of 5 standardised firefighting drills in a training structure (carrying a hose up 4 flights, hoisting a hose, discharging a pump can, dragging a dummy, chopping a block of wood). 10 min rest between trials | Significant ( | 57 |
| Angerer et al. [ | 49 firefighter trainees | Nude BW | 30 min fire operation in a large simulation plant (ascending stairs, dragging hoses, fire suppression, dragging 80 kg dummy up and downstairs, crouched progression) | BW significantly ( | 61 |
| Raines et al. [ | 34 firefighters (32 male, 2 female) | Plasma Osm | PR group consumed 600mLwater and 600 mL sport drink per hour of shift | PR group significantly higher total water intake (7.1 ± 3.1 L PR, 3.4 ± 1.6 L AD, | 57 |
| Ruby et al. [ | 14 wildland firefighters | Water turnover | 5 day period of arduous fire suppression (hiking with load and fire line construction) | Water turnover 6.7 ± 4 L/day | 50 |
| Raines et al. [ | 12 male wildfire firefighters | Plasma Osm | 2 days of 12 h live fire prescribed operation (controlled fire application, building containment lines with hoe, chasing spot fires and applying water) | No significant ( | 57 |
| Eglin et al. [ | 14 firefighter instructors | USG | 30 hot fire (HF) exercises (33 ± 7.9 min, 74 ± 42 °C) | Mean BW change 0.96 ± 0.41 kg/h, fluid deficit 0.62 ± 0.61 L HF exercises (0.79 ± 0.80 %/h) | 50 |
CAS critical appraisal score, PPE personal protective equipment, SCBA self-contained breathing apparatus, HCT haematocrit, USG urine specific gravity, BW body weight, Osm osmolality