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Relevance of thermal environment to human health: a case study of Ondo State, Nigeria
Authors:Akinyemi Gabriel Omonijo  Clement Olabinjo Adeofun  Olusegun Oguntoke  Andreas Matzarakis
Affiliation:1. Meteorological Institute, Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Werthmannstr. 10, 79085, Freiburg, Germany
2. Department of Agricultural Technology, Rufus Giwa Polytechnic, Owo, Ondo State, Nigeria
3. Department of Environmental Management & Toxicology, University of Agriculture, Abeokuta, Nigeria
4. Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Johannesburg, Kingsway Campus, Johannesburg, South Africa
Abstract:The interconnection between weather and climate and the performance, well-being, and human health cannot be overemphasized. The relationship between them is of both local and global significance. Information about weather, climate, and thermal environment is very important to human health and medical practitioners. The most crucial environmental information needed by medical practitioners and for maintaining human health, performance, and well-being are thermal conditions. The study used meteorological variables: air temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, solar radiation, and RayMan model as an analytical tool to compute physiologically equivalent temperature (PET) in order to assess thermo-physiological thresholds in Ondo State. The study revealed that there are marked spatial and seasonal variations in the environmental thermal conditions in the study area. The results of physiologically equivalent temperature for different grades of thermal sensation and physiological stress on human beings indicate that about 60 % of the total study period (1998–2008) fall under physiological stress level of moderate heat stress (PET 31–36 °C). In derived savannah, 32.6 % out of the total study period was under strong heat stress. In view of this, the study concluded that Ondo State may likely be prone to heat-related ailments and that some of the death recorded in the State, in recent times, may be heat-related mortality, but this is difficult to ascertain because there is no postmortem records in Nigeria where it could be confirmed. This type of study is relevant to help government to improve health care interventions and achieve Millennium Development Goals in health sector.
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