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Heat stress can kill up to 2,000 workers and cause an additional 170,000 injuries on job sites across the United States annually, according to a new report released today by Public Citizen. The devastating impact of heat related injuries comes as the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) and Congress continue to consider actions intended to prevent heat-related illnesses, injuries, and fatalities in both indoor and outdoor workplaces.

“The toll of unaddressed workplace heat stress on workers’ lives and well-being is immeasurable and unacceptable,” said Juley Fulcher, worker health and safety advocate with Public Citizen. “Meaningful action by Congress or OSHA could prevent tens of thousands of heat-related injuries and illnesses each year.”

The report, which builds on Public Citizen’s long-standing campaign to protect workers from excessive heat, found that:

Last week, the World Meteorological Organization released a report detailing how forecasts of a strong El Niño pattern combined with the impacts of the climate crisis will likely push temperatures soaring over the next five years.

“For every 1º Celsius increase in temperature, workplace injuries rise by 1%, making heat stress prevention crucial,” said Fulcher. “Employers can take simple actions to protect their employees, but unfortunately many see it as a burden. By implementing a binding and comprehensive heat stress standard from OSHA, we can prevent countless illnesses, injuries and fatalities and create safer, more productive workplaces.”

Workplaces can adopt simple and affordable measures to mitigate heat stress for employees, including access to cool drinking water and adequate “cool down” breaks in shaded or air conditioned spaces. Further, new employees can be gradually acclimatized to working in the heat, and all managers and employees can receive training on how to avoid heat-related illnesses and injuries.

Read the full report from Public Citizen here.


This content originally appeared on Common Dreams and was authored by Newswire Editor.

Citations

[1] Hot Take - Urgent Heat Crisis For Workers - Public Citizen Workplace Heat Stress Report OSHA rule ➤ https://www.citizen.org/article/hot-take/[2]https://www.osha.gov/heat-exposure/rulemaking[3] Hot Take - Urgent Heat Crisis For Workers - Public Citizen Workplace Heat Stress Report OSHA rule ➤ https://www.citizen.org/article/hot-take/[4] Boiling Point - Public Citizen ➤ https://www.citizen.org/article/boiling-point/[5] Hot Take - Urgent Heat Crisis For Workers - Public Citizen Workplace Heat Stress Report OSHA rule ➤ https://www.citizen.org/article/hot-take/