what we can do in this heat

lawa
By lawa

Heat Exhaustion
Heat exhaustion is the body’s response to an excessive loss of the water and salt contained in sweat. Those most prone to heat exhaustion are elderly people, people with high blood pressure and people working or exercising in a hot environment.

Warning Signs of Heat Exhaustion Include:

Heavy sweating
Paleness
Muscle cramps
Tiredness and weakness
Dizziness or fainting
Headache
Nausea or vomiting
What to Do

Rest in a cool, preferably air-conditioned, area.
Loosen clothing.
Cool down with a shower, bath or sponge bath
Drink plenty of non-alcoholic and caffeine-free beverages.
Seek medical attention if symptoms worsen or last longer than one hour.
Heat Stroke (Life Threatening)
Heat stroke occurs when the body becomes unable to control its temperature: the body’s temperature rises rapidly, the sweating mechanism fails, and the body is unable to cool down. Heat stroke can develop within minutes or hours. Heat stroke can cause death or permanent disability if emergency treatment is not given. Treatment includes rapidly lowering the person’s body temperature followed by intensive supportive care.

Warning Signs of Heat Stroke Vary But May Include:

Extremely high body temperature (above 103° F orally)
Red, hot and dry skin (no sweating)
Rapid pulse
Throbbing headache
Dizziness
Nausea
Confusion
Unconsciousness
What to Do

Call for immediate medical assistance.
Move the victim to a cool or shady area.
Cool the victim rapidly using whatever methods you can.
(For example, immerse the victim in a tub of cool water; place in a cool shower; spray with cool water from a garden hose or sponge with cool water. Avoid use of fans; see paragraphs below.)
Monitor body temperature, and continue cooling efforts until the body temperature drops to 101-102° F.
Do not give the victim alcohol to drink.
Get medical assistance as soon as possible.
How To Prevent Heat-Related Illness

Be aware of the warning signs of heat-related illness, such as light-headedness, mild nausea or confusion, sleepiness or profuse sweating.
While outdoors, rest frequently in a shady area so that your body's thermostat has a chance to recover.
Schedule outdoor activities carefully, preferably before noon or in the evening,
If unaccustomed to working or exercising in a hot environment, start slowly, pick up the pace gradually and limit your exercise or work time.
Wear sunscreen to protect skin from the sun's harmful rays. Sunburn affects your body's ability to cool itself and causes a loss of body fluids.
Wear lightweight, light-colored, loose-fitting clothing.
When working in the heat, monitor the condition of your co-workers and have someone do the same for you. If you are 65 years of age or older, have a friend or relative call to check on you twice a day when hot weather health advisories have been issued.
Stay indoors and in an air-conditioned environment. If air conditioning is not available, consider a visit to a shopping mall, public library, movie theater, supermarket or other air-conditioned location for a few hours.
Increase your fluid intake—regardless of your activity level. Don't wait until you feel thirsty to drink fluids. Ensure infants and children drink adequate amounts of liquids.
Avoid drinks containing caffeine, alcohol, or large amounts of sugar because they will actually cause you to lose more fluid. Also, avoid very cold beverages because they can cause stomach cramps.
Electric fans may be useful to increase comfort and to draw cool air into your home at night, but do not rely on a fan as your primary cooling device during a heat wave. When the temperature is in the upper 90s or higher, a fan will not prevent heat-related illness. A cool shower or bath is a more effective way to cool off. (See paragraphs below.
Check regularly on those at greatest risk of heat-related illness:
infants and children up to 4 years of age
people 65 years of age or older
people who are overweight
people who overexert during work or exercise
people who are ill or on certain medications
Avoid hot foods and heavy meals.
Ask your doctor whether medications you take affect your body's response to the heat.
Do not leave infants, children or pets unattended in a parked car or other hot environment.
Use of Fans for Cooling
In order for a fan to be effective, the skin surface must be moist. When the skin surface is moist, moving air removes heat from the skin as the moisture evaporates. Unfortunately, when a person begins to develop heat stroke, they stop sweating. In addition, elderly persons may not sweat due to poor heat regulation messages sent out by their brain centers. If a fan is to be effective, the skin must be moist either with sweat, or with dampened clothing, or with moisture added by rubbing wet cloths over the skin surface.

Although fans are less expensive to operate, they may not be effective as indicated above, and may even be harmful, when temperatures are very high. As the air temperature rises, air flow is increasingly ineffective in cooling the body until finally, at temperatures above about 100° F (the exact number varies with the humidity) increasing air movement actually increases heat stress. More specifically, when the temperature of the air rises to about 100° F, the fan may be delivering overheated air to the skin at a rate that exceeds the capacity of the body to get rid of this heat, even with sweating, and the net effect is to add heat rather than to cool the body. The widespread distribution of fans, often practiced in the past as a heat-relief measure, thus appears unlikely to be particularly effective in preventing major heat-related health effects when temperatures are very high. The better alternative by far when the temperature soars is to use an air conditioner if one is available or to seek shelter in an air-conditioned building.

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 12:37
lawa

to go out but then as you said only thing is plenty of water

By PARISNIGHTS• 18 Jul 2010 11:38
PARISNIGHTS

Thank you for the post!

All I can say is dont forget to drink plenty of water!

And try to stay inside during the hottest part of the day!

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 10:39
lawa

is better than before

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 08:14
lawa

change our daily food

brakefast should be with juices and labban or milk

lunch with cheez or youghurt and fruit salads

dinner light

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 08:08
lawa

but the timeing should be affter 5 in evening

and even all clubs over here they have chiller system in pools

By mjamille28• 18 Jul 2010 08:03
mjamille28

like I say, if the pool is located in a covered area, it may help refresh the body,.. otherwise, it's a no..

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 08:00
lawa

i am already doing it

By mjamille28• 18 Jul 2010 07:43
mjamille28

swimming? in this heat? are you kidding me? well, I suppose, if the swimming pool is covered...

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 07:40
lawa

what about swimming does it effects

By mjamille28• 18 Jul 2010 07:36
mjamille28

always rehydrate! and stay indoors as much as possible...

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 07:32
lawa

medical info

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 07:31
lawa

we looking for you advices

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 07:16
lawa

the best but

you need to do it by giving advices to those

who are not coming in Campaign

By SPEED• 18 Jul 2010 07:07
SPEED

starting next week :-)

TFS.

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 07:03
lawa

heat days are coming

By lawa• 18 Jul 2010 06:45
lawa

to beat the heat

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