Table 1.
PHE Definition |
“The realized contact between a person and an indoor or outdoor environment that poses a risk of increases in body core temperature, perceived discomfort, or both.” (Kuras et al.[2] p. 2) *Note: Exposure itself implies intensity, duration, and frequency. |
PHE is inherently linked to thermal stress and strain due to the coupling of exposure with duration and frequency to result in a meaningful exposure-response relationship.[9] | |
Heat Stress |
The net heat load on a person resulting from the combined thermal effects of the environment (air temperature, radiant temperature, humidity, and wind), metabolic heat production, and clothing.[68] Heat Stress→(Tair, H, Ws, R, P, M, Iclo)= PHE + M & Iclo |
Heat Strain | Effects on body physiology that occur as a consequence of heat stress[13]; can lead to a rise in body temperature due to body heat storage, dehydration from non-replenished sweat losses, and cardiovascular strain, such as heart rate increases to maintain blood pressure (Vanos et al[6]).
Heat Strain→(Tair, H, Ws, R, P, M, Iclo, Tsk, SR) = Heat stress + Tsk, , & SR |
temperature (Tair), humidity (H), wind speed (), radiation (R), atmospheric pressure (P), metabolic rate (M), clothing Insolation (), skin temperature , skin wettedness (), and sweat rate (SR).