How To Treat Heat Stroke In An Emergency Situation
- Apr 30, 2015
Around the United States, the temperatures are really beginning to heat up. For those of us working outdoors or in extremely warm indoor environments, now is the time to devise a plan for staying cool and safe on the job this summer.
Working a job that requires high visibility safety gear can be difficult in the heat. Ideally, you want to wear as little clothing as you can to stay cool - but sometimes that's not possible, especially when working with chemicals or materials that require specialized protective gear. There are, however, plenty of measures that can be taken to keep yourself cool no matter how warm the workplace gets.
Stay Hydrated
This might be a given, but it's also one of the most important factors. During rigorous work, your body sweats and loses fluids. In the heat of the summer, your body will lose even more fluids than normal and you can quickly become dehydrated. Make sure there's plenty of fluids on the job and try to stay away from super-sugary beverages like sodas and energy drinks as they can cause you to become even more dehydrated. Water and electrolyte drinks are ideal. Freezing a jug of water the night before and bringing that along to work will ensure you have a good supply of cool water nearly all day.
Don't Overdo It
Overexertion is a key factor to heat stress and heat stroke. While our bodies can surely handle the work, they can't handle it during extremely warm temperatures. If the body begins to struggle to keep itself cool, you run the risk of suffering from heat stress, heat stroke or even death. These situations can appear rather quickly and aren't easy to immediately reverse so be sure to pace yourself when performing hard labor or repetitive heavy lifting. It's never a good idea to push your body to it's extreme limits on those very hot days.
Seek Shade
Extended periods of direct summer sunlight can really cause your body to heat up, especially when wearing safety gear. Combine that with hard labor and a high air temperature and you have the perfect recipe for disaster. Make sure that you seek shade as needed and if possible have an area on the jobsite for cooling down. Depending on the temperatures, you'll need to take short breaks in the shade at regular intervals to cool down and rehydrate.
Get Proper Gear
A pair of shorts and a hives t-shirt might seem like the perfect combo for working during the hottest days of summer, but you're still going to lose fluids, heat up and face the risk of overexertion. There is an abundance of high visibility cooling products that have been specially designed to help decrease your core temperature and keep you cool so you can perform safely in the work place. From moisture wicking fabrics that help sweat evaporate to liquid filled cooling vests that can be worn under heavy clothing, there's no shortage of high visibility cooling gear that makes working in the extreme heat safer and more comfortable.
Stay tuned and be sure to bookmark or subscribe to our blog. We'll be writing about new products each week and providing tips to help keep you cool and productive in the workplace this summer.
The outlook for the summer of 2013 looks like it's going to be quite a scorcher. While weather experts predict that an abundance of triple-digit record high temperatures will be broken around the globe, it's critical that outdoor workers and business owners keep themselves both informed and aware of the potentail dangers that are brought into play by the extreme heat.
Heat stress, by definition is the strain put on the body by an increase in body heat. When the body heat rises, the heart beats faster. Ultimately, this can lead to an increase of the body's actual internal temperature.
Heat Stress occurs from an increase in body heat. There are two factors (either alone or combined) that cause the body temperature to rise - an increase of internal heat caused by working muscles or an increase of external heat caused by various factors including weather, low ventilation, secondary heat sources, etc.
Those most likely to be affected by heat stress are:
Heat exhaustion is the body's natural, instinctive response to an excessive loss of water and salt. Generally, it is brought on by extensive sweating and the subsequent failure to rehydrate and allow for periods of cooling down. Symptoms include moist clammy skin, and slightly increased body temperature.
Heat Stroke occurs when the body has completely lost its ability to control its own temperature. This is usually the end result of heat exhaustion that has went unaddressed, or ignored. Symptoms of heat stroke include:
In order to reduce the chances of heat stress and prevent heat exhaustion and stroke, the following common sense rules should be practiced in the workplace.
Make sure your coworkers and employer are both aware of the serious dangers posed by working in the extreme heat. Educate them verbally or with printed information. Work together to devise and develop a heat stress prevention plan that is agreeable for everyone, including supervisors, shift managers, foremen and contractors. Reasonable amounts of time should be made available to employees for breaks and hydration. There should be an understanding that those times will fluctuate by the day and/or hour, based on the temperature changes.
Additionally, employers are strongly urged to set a temperature cutoff point for work - this means that work will immediately cease (once the temp reaches your cutoff point) and not resume until the temperature has decreased beyond that point. Once an agreement is made, it should be verified in writing and distributed to everyone who is involved or affected.
It should be very clear that the procedure will be followed. It is highly important that NO WORKER should EVER push their body beyond its physical limitations solely because they're afraid of repercussions, retaliation or punishment by an employer - your health is the number one priority, without it you cannot work at all.
Utilize the best practices from above keep your workplace accident and incident free. It helps to ensure a safer work environment, happier workers and a better employer. Nobody wants to be hospitalized, nobody wants to see a co-worker suffer an injury and no employer wants to deal with the legalities that could arise. The best practice for everyone is to be safe instead of sorry.
For additional information, visit NIOSH's Workplace Safety and Health Topics Heat Stress Page on the CDC website. They offer a variety of resources, as well as a downloadable and printable cards that can be used as resources for heat stress prevention and emergency treatment.
To view a complete inventory of products specially designed to reduce Heat Stress, visit our Heat Stress Products page now.