Opportunities and Challenges for Personal Heat Exposure Research

Description

Background: Environmental heat exposure is a public health concern. The impacts of environmental heat on mortality and morbidity at the population scale are well documented, but little is known about specific exposures that individuals experience.

Objectives: The first objective of this

Background: Environmental heat exposure is a public health concern. The impacts of environmental heat on mortality and morbidity at the population scale are well documented, but little is known about specific exposures that individuals experience.

Objectives: The first objective of this work was to catalyze discussion of the role of personal heat exposure information in research and risk assessment. The second objective was to provide guidance regarding the operationalization of personal heat exposure research methods.

Discussion: We define personal heat exposure as realized contact between a person and an indoor or outdoor environment that poses a risk of increases in body core temperature and/or perceived discomfort. Personal heat exposure can be measured directly with wearable monitors or estimated indirectly through the combination of time–activity and meteorological data sets. Complementary information to understand individual-scale drivers of behavior, susceptibility, and health and comfort outcomes can be collected from additional monitors, surveys, interviews, ethnographic approaches, and additional social and health data sets. Personal exposure research can help reveal the extent of exposure misclassification that occurs when individual exposure to heat is estimated using ambient temperature measured at fixed sites and can provide insights for epidemiological risk assessment concerning extreme heat.

Conclusions: Personal heat exposure research provides more valid and precise insights into how often people encounter heat conditions and when, where, to whom, and why these encounters occur. Published literature on personal heat exposure is limited to date, but existing studies point to opportunities to inform public health practice regarding extreme heat, particularly where fine-scale precision is needed to reduce health consequences of heat exposure.

Details

Date Created
2017-08-01
Resource Type
Language
  • eng
Note
  • Reproduced with permission from Environmental Health Perspectives. The final version of this article can be viewed online at: https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/EHP556/#tab2
Citation and reuse

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Kuras, E. R., Richardson, M. B., Calkins, M. M., Ebi, K. L., Hess, J. J., Kintziger, K. W., . . . Hondula, D. M. (2017). Opportunities and Challenges for Personal Heat Exposure Research. Environmental Health Perspectives, 125(8). doi:10.1289/ehp556

Additional Information
English
Series
  • ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES
Extent
  • 9 pages
Open Access
Peer-reviewed
Identifier
  • Digital object identifier: 10.1289/EHP556
  • Identifier Type
    International standard serial number
    Identifier Value
    0091-6765
  • Identifier Type
    International standard serial number
    Identifier Value
    1552-9924