Occupational Health and Safety: Outdoor Workers and Sun Exposure
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Occupational Safety and Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 May 2023) | Viewed by 14035
Special Issue Editors
Interests: lighting; indoor environmental quality; energy efficiency; sustainability; non-visual effects of light; photobiology
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: occupational health and safety; epidemiology of occupational diseases; ionizing and non-ionizing radiation exposure; occupational medicine; workers' health; prevention at in workplaces; exposure to occupational risk factors
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: spectral and radiometric measurements; coherent and incoherent optical radiations; solar radiation exposure; chemical analysis; synthesis and purification of organic substances
Interests: building physics; indoor environmental quality; energy performance of lighting systems
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Outdoor workers are a risk category, since they are exposed to solar radiation (SR) everyday for many hours. Sun overexposure is responsible for adverse effects on the human body, such as damage to the skin and eyes, but exposure limits related to certain effects are still not defined, since they depend on many factors, including personal characteristics. Nevertheless, several methods have been proposed to define the amount of SR received by the body and guidelines have been provided by international organizations.
Sun exposure is highly variable as it is the result of many environmental factors, such as sky conditions, period of the year, time of day/night, latitude, altitude, albedo, etc. For this reason, exposure differs from one worker to another and the assessment of the received dose is personal; various methods for its estimation have been proposed in the literature, but the measure of the real dose is still an open issue. Personal protection is widely recommended, but often, outdoor workers do not use it.
In this Special Issue, we are interested in submissions in areas including, but not limited to, the measurement of SR and exposure of outdoor workers; correlations between sun exposure and the development of diseases; advances in treatments for sun related diseases, as well as in prevention and protection systems; innovations in monitoring the personal exposure of workers; definitions of new quantities, measurement systems, and techniques.
Dr. Chiara Burattini
Dr. Alberto Modenese
Dr. Andrea Militello
Prof. Dr. Giacomo Salvadori
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- radiation measurements
- exposure assessment
- adverse effects on human body
- workers protections
- technologies for workers’ safety
- overexposure prevention
- workers’ risk categories
- quantities and measurement units
- national and international standards
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