articleEnvironmental Health PerspectivesAug 9, 2013DIAMOND OA

Methods to Calculate the Heat Index as an Exposure Metric in Environmental Health Research

Johns Hopkins University · Yale University

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Environmental health research employs a variety of metrics to measure heat exposure, both to directly study the health effects of outdoor temperature and to control for temperature in studies of other environmental exposures, including air pollution. To measure heat exposure, environmental health studies often use heat index, which incorporates both air temperature and moisture. However, the method of calculating heat index varies across environmental studies, which could mean that studies using different algorithms to calculate heat index may not be comparable. OBJECTIVE AND METHODS: We investigated 21 separate heat index algorithms found in the literature to determine a) whether different algorithms generate heat index values that are consistent with the theoretical concepts of apparent temperature and b) whether different algorithms generate similar heat index values.

Results

Although environmental studies differ in how they calculate heat index values, most studies' heat index algorithms generate values consistent with apparent temperature. Additionally, most different algorithms generate closely correlated heat index values. However, a few algorithms are potentially problematic, especially in certain weather conditions (e.g., very low relative humidity, cold weather). To aid environmental health researchers, we have created open-source software in R to calculate the heat index using the U.S. National Weather Service's algorithm.

Citation impact

553
total citations
FWCI
7.50
Percentile
100%
References
58
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Index (typography)
  • Heat index
  • Metric (unit)
  • Environmental science
  • Heat capacity
  • Meteorology
  • Computer science
  • Humidity
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Funding