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Impact of occupational heat stress on worker productivity and economic cost

Margaret C. Morrissey, Gabrielle J. Brewer, W. Jon Williams, Tyler D. Quinn, Douglas J. Casa

2021American Journal of Industrial Medicine60 citationsDOI

Abstract

Heat stress is a growing concern in the occupational setting as it endangers worker health, safety, and productivity. Heat-related reductions in physical work capacity and missed workdays directly and indirectly cause productivity losses and may substantially affect the economic wellbeing of the organization. This review highlights the physiological, physical, psychological, and financial harms of heat stress on worker productivity and proposes strategies to quantify heat-related productivity losses. Heat stress produces a vicious-cycle feedback loop that result in adverse outcomes on worker health, safety, and productivity. We propose a theoretical model for implementing an occupational heat safety plan that disrupts this loop, preventing heat-related productivity losses while improving worker health and safety.

Topics & Concepts

ProductivityMedicineOccupational safety and healthHeat stressAffect (linguistics)Virtuous circle and vicious circleWork (physics)Environmental healthLabour economicsEconomic growthEconomicsEngineeringMechanical engineeringPsychologyAtmospheric sciencesMacroeconomicsPathologyCommunicationGeologyClimate Change and Health ImpactsThermoregulation and physiological responsesAir Quality and Health Impacts
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