Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia

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Standard

Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia. / Pogačar, Tjaša; Črepinšek, Zalika; Kajfež Bogataj, Lučka; Nybo, Lars.

I: Acta Agriculturae Slovenica, Bind 109, Nr. 3, 2017, s. 545-554.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Pogačar, T, Črepinšek, Z, Kajfež Bogataj, L & Nybo, L 2017, 'Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia', Acta Agriculturae Slovenica, bind 109, nr. 3, s. 545-554. https://doi.org/10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06

APA

Pogačar, T., Črepinšek, Z., Kajfež Bogataj, L., & Nybo, L. (2017). Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia. Acta Agriculturae Slovenica, 109(3), 545-554. https://doi.org/10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06

Vancouver

Pogačar T, Črepinšek Z, Kajfež Bogataj L, Nybo L. Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia. Acta Agriculturae Slovenica. 2017;109(3):545-554. https://doi.org/10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06

Author

Pogačar, Tjaša ; Črepinšek, Zalika ; Kajfež Bogataj, Lučka ; Nybo, Lars. / Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia. I: Acta Agriculturae Slovenica. 2017 ; Bind 109, Nr. 3. s. 545-554.

Bibtex

@article{55b58fc8f570491fa98e1435aae24499,
title = "Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia",
abstract = "Climate changes and the associated higher frequency of heat waves in Middle-European countries will aggravate occupational heat stress experienced by Slovenian workers. Appropriate behavioral adaptations are important coping strategies and it is pertinent to establish if knowledge among advisers and workers is sufficient and identify the symptoms experienced by workers. Therefore a survey including 230 farmers and 86 agricultural advisers was completed. Thermal comfort ranged from hot to extremely hot for 85 ± 5 % of farmers working outside and heat stress had a negative impact on well-being (74 ± 6 %), productivity (68 ± 6 %) and concentration (34 ± 6 %). Reported symptoms were excessive sweating (84 ± 5 %), thirst (81 ± 5 %), and tiredness (59 ± 6 %). Women had a higher prevalence of headache (64 ± 10 %) compared to males (47 ± 8 %), higher frequency of fatigue (69 ± 10 vs 56 ± 8 %), and incidents with nausea or vomiting (19 ± 8 vs 9 ± 5 %). 81 ± 4 % of the responders reported that more time is required to complete tasks when the weather is hot. Nevertheless, 61 ± 6 % of farmers have never been informed of the impacts of heat stress and 29 ± 10 % of the agricultural advisers does not include this information in their guidance. This emphasizes the need for increased information and implementation of feasible solutions to mitigate the negative impact of heat stress on workers in the agricultural sector.",
keywords = "Agricultural advisers, Farmers, Health, Heat stress, Labor, Well-being",
author = "Tja{\v s}a Poga{\v c}ar and Zalika {\v C}repin{\v s}ek and {Kajfe{\v z} Bogataj}, Lu{\v c}ka and Lars Nybo",
note = "CURIS 2017 NEXS 377",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06",
language = "English",
volume = "109",
pages = "545--554",
journal = "Acta Agriculturae Slovenica",
issn = "1581-9175",
publisher = "University of Ljubljana",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comprehension of climatic and occupational heat stress amongst agricultural advisers and workers in Slovenia

AU - Pogačar, Tjaša

AU - Črepinšek, Zalika

AU - Kajfež Bogataj, Lučka

AU - Nybo, Lars

N1 - CURIS 2017 NEXS 377

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Climate changes and the associated higher frequency of heat waves in Middle-European countries will aggravate occupational heat stress experienced by Slovenian workers. Appropriate behavioral adaptations are important coping strategies and it is pertinent to establish if knowledge among advisers and workers is sufficient and identify the symptoms experienced by workers. Therefore a survey including 230 farmers and 86 agricultural advisers was completed. Thermal comfort ranged from hot to extremely hot for 85 ± 5 % of farmers working outside and heat stress had a negative impact on well-being (74 ± 6 %), productivity (68 ± 6 %) and concentration (34 ± 6 %). Reported symptoms were excessive sweating (84 ± 5 %), thirst (81 ± 5 %), and tiredness (59 ± 6 %). Women had a higher prevalence of headache (64 ± 10 %) compared to males (47 ± 8 %), higher frequency of fatigue (69 ± 10 vs 56 ± 8 %), and incidents with nausea or vomiting (19 ± 8 vs 9 ± 5 %). 81 ± 4 % of the responders reported that more time is required to complete tasks when the weather is hot. Nevertheless, 61 ± 6 % of farmers have never been informed of the impacts of heat stress and 29 ± 10 % of the agricultural advisers does not include this information in their guidance. This emphasizes the need for increased information and implementation of feasible solutions to mitigate the negative impact of heat stress on workers in the agricultural sector.

AB - Climate changes and the associated higher frequency of heat waves in Middle-European countries will aggravate occupational heat stress experienced by Slovenian workers. Appropriate behavioral adaptations are important coping strategies and it is pertinent to establish if knowledge among advisers and workers is sufficient and identify the symptoms experienced by workers. Therefore a survey including 230 farmers and 86 agricultural advisers was completed. Thermal comfort ranged from hot to extremely hot for 85 ± 5 % of farmers working outside and heat stress had a negative impact on well-being (74 ± 6 %), productivity (68 ± 6 %) and concentration (34 ± 6 %). Reported symptoms were excessive sweating (84 ± 5 %), thirst (81 ± 5 %), and tiredness (59 ± 6 %). Women had a higher prevalence of headache (64 ± 10 %) compared to males (47 ± 8 %), higher frequency of fatigue (69 ± 10 vs 56 ± 8 %), and incidents with nausea or vomiting (19 ± 8 vs 9 ± 5 %). 81 ± 4 % of the responders reported that more time is required to complete tasks when the weather is hot. Nevertheless, 61 ± 6 % of farmers have never been informed of the impacts of heat stress and 29 ± 10 % of the agricultural advisers does not include this information in their guidance. This emphasizes the need for increased information and implementation of feasible solutions to mitigate the negative impact of heat stress on workers in the agricultural sector.

KW - Agricultural advisers

KW - Farmers

KW - Health

KW - Heat stress

KW - Labor

KW - Well-being

U2 - 10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06

DO - 10.14720/aas.2017.109.3.06

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85038869318

VL - 109

SP - 545

EP - 554

JO - Acta Agriculturae Slovenica

JF - Acta Agriculturae Slovenica

SN - 1581-9175

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 190438098