1 / 24

Heat and heat related illness

Heat and heat related illness. Laurel Harduar Morano , MPH University of North Carolina School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology. Overview. Heat-Related Illness Environmental Parameters Epidemiology Work in Florida. The human body and heat.

rico
Télécharger la présentation

Heat and heat related illness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Heat and heat related illness Laurel HarduarMorano, MPH University of North Carolina School of Public Health Department of Epidemiology

  2. Overview • Heat-Related Illness • Environmental Parameters • Epidemiology • Work in Florida

  3. The human body and heat • Heat = byproduct of metabolic processes • Physical activity increases → energy consumption increases → more heat is produced • Heat absorbed from the external environment • Body gets rid of heat mainly through circulatory system and evaporation • Behavioral modification and adaption

  4. Heat Illness: Exhaustion/Stroke*

  5. Heat Stroke Types • Classical • High external Temperatures • Individuals whose thermoregulatory process is compromised • Individuals who lack ability to employ behavioral modification • Exertional • Strenuous activity (usually hot and humid weather) • Susceptibility = poor acclimatization, dehydration, heavy clothing, and underlying medical conditions. • Affects young healthy adults

  6. Heat-related illness (proxies) • Total morbidity or mortality • Circulatory disease • Cardiovascular • Stroke • Respiratory disease • Renal disease • Dehydration • Diabetes

  7. Environmental Parameters

  8. Environmental Parameters • Clothing insulation • Metabolic heat production • Ambient air temperature • Air velocity • Mean radiant temperature • Temperature from all sources • Humidity

  9. Heat proxy = temp or temp+humidityObtained from weather stations Florida North Carolina

  10. Epidemiology

  11. Epidemiology (US overview) • 1999-2003: 688 deaths/year due to extreme heat, hyperthermia, or both • 2009: 7,151 hospitalizations and 48,876 ED visits for heat-related illness • 2009: 35 occupational deaths (rate = 0.015/100,000 workers) and 2,170 injuries to workers requiring days away from work (rate = 2/100,000 full-time workers) • 2005-2009: estimated 9,237 high school athletes lost ≥ 1 days of activity due to dehydration, heat exhaustion, or heat stroke

  12. Occupational Epidemiology • High Risk: outdoor workers, firefighters, kitchen workers, miners, factory workers, soldiers, and metal smelters • 1998-2002: Hospitalizations = 20/100,000 US Army soldiers; Death: 0.3/100,000 US Army soldiers • 1995-2005: Washington workers’ comp -fire protection (rate = 80.9/100,000 FTE), roofing construction (rate = 59.0/100,000 FTE), and highway, street and bridge construction (rate = 44.8/100,000 FTE) • 1992-2006: 57% of crop worker death occurred in California, Florida, and North Carolina

  13. Risk Factors • Age • Elderly and very young • Gender • Race/ethnicity • Socio-economic status • Medical factors • Air-conditioning • Urban Heat Islands

  14. Florida

  15. Selected characteristics of Florida residents diagnosed in a Florida hospital or ED with HRI and characteristics of Florida population, 2005-2009 (N=18,572) †Note 136 individuals did not report their race/ethnicity.

  16. Selected characteristics of Florida residents diagnosed in a Florida hospital or ED with HRI and characteristics of Florida Workers, 2005-2009 (N=2,198) †Note 14 individuals did not report their race/ethnicity.

  17. Distribution of rates of heat-related hospitalizations and ED visits by age group among Florida residents, 2005-2009 (N=18,572)

  18. Distribution of age group by rates of occupationalHRI hospitalizations and ED visits among Floridians, 2005-2009 (N=2,198) Rate per 100,000 worker Age group (years)

  19. Exposure Assignment Apopka Orlando Avalon

  20. Estimated non-occupational heat-related illness incidence rate/1,000,000 person-days

  21. Estimated non-occupational heat-related illness incidence rate per 1,000,000 person days days

  22. Questions? • Laurel HarduarMorano, MPH • harduarm@email.unc.edu

More Related