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Clinical Trial Summary

With the increasing incidence and severity of extreme heat events accompanying climate change, there is an urgent need for sustainable cooling strategies to protect heat-vulnerable older adults, who are at increased risk of adverse health events during heat stress. Health agencies including the World Health Organization, the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Health Canada currently recommend visiting a cooling centre or other air-conditioned location for 1-3 hours per day during extreme heat events to mitigate hyperthermia and strain on the cardiovascular system and therefore the risk adverse health events. However, our recent trial shows that while brief air-conditioning exposure is effective for reducing body temperature and cardiovascular burden in healthy older adults, the physiological impacts of cooling abate quickly following return to the heat. The purpose of this project is therefore to assess whether shorter but more frequent air-conditioning exposure provides more effective cooling than current recommendations (a single 1-3-hour cooling bout) in older adults with or without common chronic health conditions associated with increased vulnerability to extreme heat. This will be accomplished by evaluating physiological strain in older adults with and without diabetes and/or hypertension exposed for 8 hours to conditions reflective of extreme heat events in temperate, continental climates (35°C, 60% relative humidity). Participants will complete 3 separate simulated heat event exposures: i) a control trial (no cooling throughout the 8-hour heat event); ii) a recommended cooling trial (3 hours of heat exposure followed by 2 hours cooling); and iii) a hybrid cooling trial (2 hours of heat exposure followed by 1 hour cooling, another 2 hours heat exposure followed by 1 hour cooling, and a final 2-hour heat exposure).


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05274009
Study type Interventional
Source University of Ottawa
Contact Glen P Kenny, PhD
Phone 6135625800
Email gkenny@uottawa.ca
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 2023
Completion date May 2024

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