How Does Environmental Temperature Affect Farmworkers' Work Rates in the California Heat Illness Prevention Study?

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Abstract

Objective Estimate the association between environmental temperature (wet bulb globe temperature [WBGT]) and work rate over the course of a workday. Methods Repeated-measures regression was used to identify characteristics impacting work rate in a cross-sectional study of Latino farmworkers. Minute-by-minute work rate (measured by accelerometer) and WBGT were averaged over 15-minute intervals. Results Work rate decreased by 4.34 (95% confidence interval [CI], -7.09 to -1.59) counts per minute per degree Celsius WBGT in the previous 15-minute interval. Cumulative quarter hours worked (2.13; 95% CI, 0.82 to 3.45), age (-3.64; 95% CI, -4.50 to -2.79), and dehydration at the end of workday (51.37; 95% CI, 19.24 to 83.50) were associated with counts per minute as were gender, pay type (piece rate vs hourly) and body mass index ≥25 kg/m2. The effects of pay type and body mass index were modified by gender. Conclusion Increased temperature was associated with a decrease in work rate.

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APA

Langer, C. E., Armitage, T. L., Beckman, S., Tancredi, D. J., Mitchell, D. C., & Schenker, M. B. (2023). How Does Environmental Temperature Affect Farmworkers’ Work Rates in the California Heat Illness Prevention Study? Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 65(7), E458–E464. https://doi.org/10.1097/JOM.0000000000002853

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