Nathan B Morris1, Jacob F Piil1, Marco Morabito2, Alessandro Messeri3, Miriam Levi4, Leonidas G Ioannou5, Ursa Ciuha6, Tjaša Pogačar7, Lučka Kajfež Bogataj7, Boris Kingma8, Ana Casanueva9, Sven Kotlarski10, Christoph Spirig10, Josh Foster11, George Havenith11, Tiago Sotto Mayor12, Andreas D Flouris13, Lars Nybo14. 1. Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. 2. Institute of BioEconomy (IBE) - National Research Council c/o Area di Ricerca di Firenze, Italy; Centre of Bioclimatology - University of Florence, Italy. 3. Institute of BioEconomy (IBE) - National Research Council c/o Area di Ricerca di Firenze, Italy; Centre of Bioclimatology - University of Florence, Italy; Department of Agriculture, Food, Environment and Forestry (DAGRI), University of Florence (UNIFI), Italy. 4. Epidemiology Unit, Central Tuscany Local Health Unit, Italy. 5. Department of Automatics, Biocybernetics, and Robotics, Jožef Stefan Institute, Slovenia; FAME Laboratory, Department of Exercise Science, University of Thessaly, Greece. 6. Department of Automatics, Biocybernetics, and Robotics, Jožef Stefan Institute, Slovenia. 7. Department of Agronomy, Biotechnical Faculty, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia. 8. Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; TNO, The Netherlands Organization for Applied Scientific Research, Unit Defence, Safety & Security, The Netherlands. 9. Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, Switzerland; Meteorology Group, Dept. Applied Mathematics and Computer Sciences, University of Cantabria, Spain. 10. Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, Switzerland. 11. Environmental Ergonomics Research Centre, School of Design and Creative Arts, Loughborough University, UK. 12. SIMTECH Laboratory, Transport Phenomena Research Centre, Engineering Faculty of Porto University, Portugal. 13. FAME Laboratory, Department of Exercise Science, University of Thessaly, Greece. 14. Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Electronic address: nybo@nexs.ku.dk.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To provide perspectives from the HEAT-SHIELD project (www.heat-shield.eu): a multi-national, inter-sectoral, and cross-disciplinary initiative, incorporating twenty European research institutions, as well as occupational health and industrial partners, on solutions to combat negative health and productivity effects caused by working on a warmer world. METHODS: In this invited review, we focus on the theoretical and methodological advancements developed to combat occupational heat stress during the last five years of operation. RESULTS: We outline how we created climate forecast models to incorporate humidity, wind and solar radiation to the traditional temperature-based climate projections, providing the basis for timely, policy-relevant, industry-specific and individualized information. Further, we summarise the industry-specific guidelines we developed regarding technical and biophysical cooling solutions considering effectiveness, cost, sustainability, and the practical implementation potential in outdoor and indoor settings, in addition to field-testing of selected solutions with time-motion analyses and biophysical evaluations. All recommendations were adjusted following feedback from workshops with employers, employees, safety officers, and adjacent stakeholders such as local or national health policy makers. The cross-scientific approach was also used for providing policy-relevant information based on socioeconomic analyses and identification of vulnerable regions considered to be more relevant for political actions than average continental recommendations and interventions. DISCUSSION: From the HEAT-SHIELD experiences developed within European settings, we discuss how this inter-sectoral approach may be adopted or translated into actionable knowledge across continents where workers and societies are affected by escalating environmental temperatures.
OBJECTIVES: To provide perspectives from the HEAT-SHIELD project (www.heat-shield.eu): a multi-national, inter-sectoral, and cross-disciplinary initiative, incorporating twenty European research institutions, as well as occupational health and industrial partners, on solutions to combat negative health and productivity effects caused by working on a warmer world. METHODS: In this invited review, we focus on the theoretical and methodological advancements developed to combat occupational heat stress during the last five years of operation. RESULTS: We outline how we created climate forecast models to incorporate humidity, wind and solar radiation to the traditional temperature-based climate projections, providing the basis for timely, policy-relevant, industry-specific and individualized information. Further, we summarise the industry-specific guidelines we developed regarding technical and biophysical cooling solutions considering effectiveness, cost, sustainability, and the practical implementation potential in outdoor and indoor settings, in addition to field-testing of selected solutions with time-motion analyses and biophysical evaluations. All recommendations were adjusted following feedback from workshops with employers, employees, safety officers, and adjacent stakeholders such as local or national health policy makers. The cross-scientific approach was also used for providing policy-relevant information based on socioeconomic analyses and identification of vulnerable regions considered to be more relevant for political actions than average continental recommendations and interventions. DISCUSSION: From the HEAT-SHIELD experiences developed within European settings, we discuss how this inter-sectoral approach may be adopted or translated into actionable knowledge across continents where workers and societies are affected by escalating environmental temperatures.
Authors: Leonidas G Ioannou; Petros C Dinas; Sean R Notley; Flora Gofa; George A Gourzoulidis; Matt Brearley; Yoram Epstein; George Havenith; Michael N Sawka; Peter Bröde; Igor B Mekjavic; Glen P Kenny; Thomas E Bernard; Lars Nybo; Andreas D Flouris Journal: Temperature (Austin) Date: 2022-03-27
Authors: Leonidas G Ioannou; Josh Foster; Nathan B Morris; Jacob F Piil; George Havenith; Igor B Mekjavic; Glen P Kenny; Lars Nybo; Andreas D Flouris Journal: Temperature (Austin) Date: 2022-04-26
Authors: Leonidas G Ioannou; Lydia Tsoutsoubi; Konstantinos Mantzios; Maria Vliora; Eleni Nintou; Jacob F Piil; Sean R Notley; Petros C Dinas; George A Gourzoulidis; George Havenith; Matt Brearley; Igor B Mekjavic; Glen P Kenny; Lars Nybo; Andreas D Flouris Journal: Temperature (Austin) Date: 2022-04-01
Authors: Leonidas G Ioannou; Konstantinos Mantzios; Lydia Tsoutsoubi; Eleni Nintou; Maria Vliora; Paraskevi Gkiata; Constantinos N Dallas; Giorgos Gkikas; Gerasimos Agaliotis; Kostas Sfakianakis; Areti K Kapnia; Davide J Testa; Tânia Amorim; Petros C Dinas; Tiago S Mayor; Chuansi Gao; Lars Nybo; Andreas D Flouris Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-06-10 Impact factor: 3.390