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      Long-term analysis of heat waves in Ukraine : LONG-TERM ANALYSIS OF HEAT WAVES IN UKRAINE

      , , ,
      International Journal of Climatology
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Heat stress and public health: a critical review.

          Heat is an environmental and occupational hazard. The prevention of deaths in the community caused by extreme high temperatures (heat waves) is now an issue of public health concern. The risk of heat-related mortality increases with natural aging, but persons with particular social and/or physical vulnerability are also at risk. Important differences in vulnerability exist between populations, depending on climate, culture, infrastructure (housing), and other factors. Public health measures include health promotion and heat wave warning systems, but the effectiveness of acute measures in response to heat waves has not yet been formally evaluated. Climate change will increase the frequency and the intensity of heat waves, and a range of measures, including improvements to housing, management of chronic diseases, and institutional care of the elderly and the vulnerable, will need to be developed to reduce health impacts.
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            The physiological equivalent temperature - a universal index for the biometeorological assessment of the thermal environment.

            P Hoppe (1999)
            With considerably increased coverage of weather information in the news media in recent years in many countries, there is also more demand for data that are applicable and useful for everyday life. Both the perception of the thermal component of weather as well as the appropriate clothing for thermal comfort result from the integral effects of all meteorological parameters relevant for heat exchange between the body and its environment. Regulatory physiological processes can affect the relative importance of meteorological parameters, e.g. wind velocity becomes more important when the body is sweating. In order to take into account all these factors, it is necessary to use a heat-balance model of the human body. The physiological equivalent temperature (PET) is based on the Munich Energy-balance Model for Individuals (MEMI), which models the thermal conditions of the human body in a physiologically relevant way. PET is defined as the air temperature at which, in a typical indoor setting (without wind and solar radiation), the heat budget of the human body is balanced with the same core and skin temperature as under the complex outdoor conditions to be assessed. This way PET enables a layperson to compare the integral effects of complex thermal conditions outside with his or her own experience indoors. On hot summer days, for example, with direct solar irradiation the PET value may be more than 20 K higher than the air temperature, on a windy day in winter up to 15 K lower.
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              Contribution of land-atmosphere coupling to recent European summer heat waves

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Climatology
                Int. J. Climatol.
                Wiley-Blackwell
                08998418
                April 2014
                April 26 2014
                : 34
                : 5
                : 1642-1650
                Article
                10.1002/joc.3792
                eac3838b-bed6-4610-b042-93f9633f2d4c
                © 2014

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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