Evaluation of the thermal insulation of clothing of infants sleeping outdoors in Northern winter

被引:0
|
作者
Marjo Tourula
Takako Fukazawa
Arja Isola
Juhani Hassi
Yutaka Tochihara
Hannu Rintamäki
机构
[1] University of Oulu,Institute of Health Sciences
[2] Finnish Post-Graduate School in Nursing Science,Department of Living Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Human Environmental Sciences
[3] Fukuoka Women’s University,Department of Ergonomics, Faculty of Design
[4] Kyushu University,Institute of Biomedicine
[5] Finnish Institute of Occupational Health,undefined
[6] University of Oulu,undefined
来源
European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2011年 / 111卷
关键词
Clothing; Infant; Sleep; Microclimate temperature; Skin temperature; Cold climate;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
It is a common practice in Northern countries that children aged about 2 weeks to 2 years take their daytime sleep outdoors in prams in winter. The aim was to evaluate the thermal insulation of clothing of infants sleeping outdoors in winter. Clothing data of infants aged 3.5 months was collected, and sleep duration, skin and microclimate temperatures, humidity inside middle wear, air temperature and velocity of the outdoor environment were recorded during sleep taken outdoors (n = 34) and indoors (n = 33) in families’ homes. The insulation of clothing ensembles was measured by using a baby-size thermal manikin, and the values were used for defining clothing insulation of the observed infants. Required clothing insulation for each condition was estimated according to ISO 11079. Clothing insulation did not correlate with ambient air temperature. The observed and required insulation of the study group was equal at about −5°C, but overdressing existed in warmer and deficiency in thermal insulation in colder temperatures (rs 0.739, p < 0.001). However, even at −5°C a slow cooling (ca. 0.012°C/min) of mean skin temperature (Tsk) was observed. When the difference between observed and required insulation increased, the cooling rate of Tsk increased linearly (rs 0.605, p < 0.001) and the infants slept for a shorter period (rs 0.524, p = 0.001). The results of this study show the difficulty of adjusting systematically the optimal thermal insulation for outdoor sleeping infants during northern winter. Therefore, the necessity for guidelines is obvious. The study provides information for adequate cold protection of infants sleeping in cold conditions.
引用
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页码:633 / 640
页数:7
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