THROUGHOUT A HEAT-WAVE, FOLLOW THE RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE LOCAL HEALTH AUTHORITIES

 

Keep your home cool

  • Aim to keep your living space cool. Check the room temperature between 08:00 and 10:00, at 13:00 and at night after 22:00. Ideally, the room temperature should be kept below 32 °C during the day and 24 °C during the night. This is especially important for infants or people who are over 60 years of age or have chronic health conditions.
  • Use the night air to cool down your home. Open all windows and shutters during the night and the early morning, when the outside temperature is lower (if safe to do so).
  • Reduce the heat load inside the apartment or house. Close windows and shutters (if available) especially those facing the sun during the day. Turn off artificial lighting and as many electrical devices as possible.
  • Hang shades, draperies, awnings or louvers on windows that receive morning or afternoon sun.
  • Hang wet towels to cool down the room air. Note that the humidity of the air increases at the same time.
  • If your residence is air conditioned, close the doors and windows and conserve electricity not needed to keep you cool, to ensure that power remains available and reduce the chance of a community-wide outage.
  • Electric fans may provide relief, but when the temperature is above 35 °C, may not prevent heatrelated illness. It is important to drink fluids.

Keep out of the heat

  • Move to the coolest room in the home, especially at night.
  • If it is not possible to keep your home cool, spend 2–3 hours of the day in a cool place (such as an airconditioned public building).
  • Avoid going outside during the hottest time of the day.
  • Avoid strenuous physical activity if you can. If you must do strenuous activity, do it during the coolest part of the day, which is usually in the morning between 4:00 and 7:00.
  • Stay in the shade.
  • Do not leave children or animals in parked vehicles

 

Keep the body cool and hydrated

  • Take cool showers or baths. Alternatives include cold packs and wraps, towels, sponging, foot baths, etc.
  • Wear light, loose-fitting clothes of natural materials. If you go outside, wear a wide-brimmed hat or cap and sunglasses.
  • Use light bed linen and sheets, and no cushions, to avoid heat accumulation.
  • Drink regularly, but avoid alcohol and too much caffeine and sugar.
  • Eat small meals and eat more often. Avoid foods that are high in protein.

 

If you or othersfeel unwell

  • Try to get help if you feel dizzy, weak, anxious or have intense thirst and headache; move to a cool place as soon as possible and measure your body temperature.
  • Drink some water or fruit juice to rehydrate.
  • Rest immediately in a cool place if you have painful muscular spasms (particularly in the legs, arms or abdomen, in many cases after sustained exercise during very hot weather), and drink oral rehydration solutions containing electrolytes. Medical attention is needed if heat cramps last more than one hour.
  • Consult your doctor if you feel unusual symptoms or if symptoms persist. If one of your family members or people you assist presents hot dry skin and delirium, convulsions and/or unconsciousness, call a doctor/ambulance immediately. While waiting for help, move the person to a cool place, put him or her in a horizontal position and elevate legs and hips, remove clothing and initiate external cooling, for example, by placing cold packs on the neck, axillae and groin, fanning continuously and spraying the skin with water at 25–30 °C. Measure the body temperature. Do not give acetylsalicylic acid or paracetamol. Position an unconscious person on his or her side.

 

https://www.who.int/phe/phe-info-for-the-public–heatwaves.pdf?ua=1