Published November 6, 2023
As the season changes from warm to cold, the common weather-related risks in construction change as well.
While slips, trips and falls are a leading cause of construction-site injuries year-round, according to OSHA, freezing weather increases the risk. Shorter daylight hours and cold-weather clothing can reduce jobsite visibility. Cold temperatures can increase the possibility of electrical faults and equipment breakdowns.
Burns and fires from portable heaters represent a risk factor that’s only present during cold weather.
And dehydration is always a concern; while it makes headlines during summer heat, the puff of steam from every breath in cold air represents moisture leaving your body. And poor hydration exacerbates the effects of cold weather on the human machine.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) outlines four illness or conditions that result from cold-related stress:
Caused by the body’s attempt to reduce heat loss from wet or cold feet by constricting blood vessels. When the feet are constantly wet, it can occur at temperatures up to 60 degrees (F), but is considered a cold-weather concern because wet feet lose heat 25 times faster than dry feet, according to NIOSH. As circulation decreases, skin tissue begins to die and naturally secreted toxins accumulate.
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Caused by freezing of skin tissue as the body reduces blood flow to its extremities in order to maintain the temperature of internal organs. It can cause permanent damage and, in extreme cases, can necessitate amputation of affected areas.
There are four degrees of frostbite, according to the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration:
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Itchy swellings on the skin that result when capillaries – the body’s smallest blood vessels – are permanently damaged by repeated exposure to cold temperatures.
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Results when the body can’t produce enough heat to offset heat loss, and the core body temperature drops below 95 degrees (F). Certain medications and conditions can reduce the ability to fight off hypothermia.
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Here are the four layers of effective cold-weather protection, according to the blog at DOZR heavy equipment rentals:
Cotton is to be avoided for all winter layers because it conducts heat away from the body when it gets damp.
Here are some additional equipment recommendations for people who work in the cold, from the trade publication For Construction Pros:
The TV meteorologists who insist on calling it the “feels-like temperature” are missing the point of calculating wind chill. It’s not about how it feels; it’s about how much bodily harm the wind adds on a cold day.
According to the National Weather Service, wind chill calculates “the rate of heat loss from exposed skin. … As the wind increases, it draws heat from the body, driving down skin temperature and eventually the internal body temperature.”
So yes, wind makes a winter day feel colder. But it can’t make anything colder than the actual air temperature; rather, it shortens the time needed to reach the air temperature.
So you can’t get frostbite if the temperature is above freezing—no matter how hard the wind is blowing. But you can get hypothermia, as the wind helps to pull heat out of your body.
According to the National Weather Service wind chill chart, if the temperature is 0 degrees (F) with no wind, it can take more than 30 minutes for exposed skin to freeze. Adding a 15-mph breeze takes the wind chill temperature to -19 degrees (F)—helping exposed skin to reach freezing in just a few minutes.
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