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Heat Stress in Construction

Heat Stress in Construction

Hazard Alert

Heat is a serious hazard in construction. Your body builds up heat when you work and sweats to

get rid of extra heat. But sometimes your body may not cool off fast enough. This can happen,

say, if you are up on a roof pouring hot asphalt or you are lifting heavy loads.

Too much heat can make you tired, hurt your job performance, and increase your chance of

injury. You can get skin rash. You can also get:

Dehydration. When your body loses water, you can’t cool off fast enough. You feel

thirsty and weak.

Cramps. You can get muscle cramps from the heat even after you leave work.

Heat exhaustion. You feel tired, nauseous, headachy, and giddy (dizzy and silly). Your

skin is damp and looks muddy or flushed. You may faint.

Heat stroke. You may have hot dry skin and a high temperature. Or you may feel

confused. You may have convulsions or become unconscious. Heat stroke can kill you

unless you get emergency medical help.

The Risk of Heat Stress

Your risk of heat stress depends on many things. These include:

• Your physical condition

• The weather (temperature, humidity)

• How much clothing you have on

• How fast you must move or how much weight you must lift

• If you are near a fan or there is a breeze

• If you are in the sun.

If there is an industrial hygienist on your work site, ask the hygienist about the Wet-Bulb Globe

Temperature Index. It is a more precise way to estimate the risk of heat stress.

Protect Yourself

Try to do these things:

Drink when you are thirsty.

Keep taking rest breaks. Rest in a cool, shady spot. Use fans.

Wear light-colored clothing made of cotton.

Do the heaviest work in the coolest time of the day.

Work in the shade.

For heavy work in hot areas, take turns with other workers, so some can rest.

If you travel to a warm area for a new job, you need time for your body to get used to the

heat. Be extra careful the first 2 weeks on the job.

If you work in protective clothing, you need more rest breaks. You may also need to check

your temperature and heart rate. On a Superfund site where the temperature is 70 degrees or

more, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) writes that while on the job you should

be monitored for heat-stress related symptoms, including changes in body temperature and heart

rate.

If you think someone has heat stroke, call emergency services (or 911). Immediately move

the victim to the shade. Loosen his/her clothes. Wipe or spray his/her skin with cool water and

fan him/her. You can use a piece of cardboard or other material as a fan.

OSHA does not have a special rule for heat. But because heat stress is known as a serious

hazard, workers are protected under the General Duty Clause of the Occupational Safety and

Health Act. The clause says employers must provide “employment free from recognized

hazards…causing or…likely to cause physical harm.”

For more information, call your local union, the Center to Protect Workers’ Rights (CPWR)

(301-578-8500 or www.cpwr.com ), the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

(1-800-35-NIOSH or www.cdc.gov/niosh), or OSHA (1-800-321-OSHA or www.osha.gov). Or

check the website www.elcosh.org

© 2005, The Center to Protect Workers’ Rights. All rights reserved. CPWR is a research, training, and service arm of the

Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO: CPWR, Suite 1000, 8484 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20910. (Edward

C. Sullivan is president of the Building and Construction Trades Dept. and of CPWR and Sean McGarvey is secretary treasurer.)

Production of this card was supported by grants CCU317202 and 1 U54 OH008307 from the National Institute for Occupational

Safety and Health and grants U45-ES09764 and U45-ES06185 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

The contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NIOSH or NIEHS.

Heat stress – December 15, 2005

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