Assessing heat exposure and its effects on farmer health, harvest yields, and nutrition: a study protocol for Burkina Faso and Kenya.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Global Health Action Pub Date : 2025-12-01 Epub Date: 2025-07-14 DOI:10.1080/16549716.2025.2513719
Sandra Barteit, Windpanga Aristide Ouédraogo, Charlotte Müller, Pascal Zabré, Issouf Traoré, Valentin Boudo, Ali Sié, Guillaume Compaoré, Lucienne Ouèrmi, Stephen Munga, David Obor, Aditi Bunker, Hanns-Christian Gunga, Kristine Belesova, Till Bärnighausen, Jonas Franke, Maximilian Schwarz, Martina Anna Maggioni, Rainer Sauerborn
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Rising temperatures in Africa present an increasing threat to agricultural productivity and public health, particularly among subsistence farming communities reliant on rain-fed agriculture. Heat exposure can impair farmers' work capacity, disrupt harvests, and heighten health risks, especially for young children vulnerable to undernutrition. The Heat to Harvest (H2H) study investigates how environmental heat exposure influences farmers' physiological and behavioral responses, and how these in turn affect harvest yields and child nutrition. It also examines differences in labor performance and recovery between households with and without cool roof coatings, although this intervention is not the central focus. H2H is designed as a prospective cohort study nested within two Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems (HDSS) in Nouna, Burkina Faso, and Siaya, Kenya. The study integrates environmental monitoring (temperature and humidity sensors used to compute Wet Bulb Globe Temperature), biometric data (via wearables tracking heart rate, temperature, physical activity, energy expenditure, and sleep), and GPS tracking (capturing spatial mobility and labor duration). The study is embedded within a larger cluster-randomized controlled trial, facilitating comparative analysis under varying thermal conditions. Findings will provide evidence-based insights into how climate-related heat stress affects health and agricultural outcomes, supporting the development of targeted adaptation strategies to enhance resilience, health, and food security in vulnerable farming communities.

评估热暴露及其对农民健康、收成和营养的影响:布基纳法索和肯尼亚的研究方案。
非洲气温上升对农业生产力和公众健康构成越来越大的威胁,特别是在依赖雨养农业的自给农业社区。高温暴露会损害农民的工作能力,扰乱收成,并增加健康风险,对易患营养不良的幼儿尤其如此。该研究调查了环境热暴露如何影响农民的生理和行为反应,以及这些反应如何反过来影响收获产量和儿童营养。它还检查了有和没有冷屋顶涂料的家庭之间的劳动表现和恢复的差异,尽管这种干预不是中心焦点。H2H被设计为一项前瞻性队列研究,嵌套在布基纳法索的Nouna和肯尼亚的Siaya两个健康和人口监测系统(HDSS)中。该研究整合了环境监测(用于计算湿球温度的温度和湿度传感器)、生物识别数据(通过可穿戴设备跟踪心率、温度、身体活动、能量消耗和睡眠)和GPS跟踪(捕捉空间流动性和劳动持续时间)。该研究嵌入在一个更大的集群随机对照试验中,便于在不同的热条件下进行比较分析。研究结果将提供基于证据的见解,了解与气候相关的热应激如何影响健康和农业成果,支持制定有针对性的适应战略,以增强脆弱农业社区的恢复力、健康和粮食安全。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Global Health Action
Global Health Action PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
108
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Global Health Action is an international peer-reviewed Open Access journal affiliated with the Unit of Epidemiology and Global Health, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University, Sweden. The Unit hosts the Umeå International School of Public Health and the Umeå Centre for Global Health Research. Vision: Our vision is to be a leading journal in the global health field, narrowing health information gaps and contributing to the implementation of policies and actions that lead to improved global health. Aim: The widening gap between the winners and losers of globalisation presents major public health challenges. To meet these challenges, it is crucial to generate new knowledge and evidence in the field and in settings where the evidence is lacking, as well as to bridge the gaps between existing knowledge and implementation of relevant findings. Thus, the aim of Global Health Action is to contribute to fuelling a more concrete, hands-on approach to addressing global health challenges. Manuscripts suggesting strategies for practical interventions and research implementations where none already exist are specifically welcomed. Further, the journal encourages articles from low- and middle-income countries, while also welcoming articles originated from South-South and South-North collaborations. All articles are expected to address a global agenda and include a strong implementation or policy component.
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