Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1080/23328940.2022.2102375
Title: Moving in a hotter world: Maintaining adequate childhood fitness as a climate change countermeasure
Authors: Morrison, SA 
Keywords: Children
behavioral thermoregulation
environmental epidemiology
exercise
heat stress
physical activity
tolerance
Issue Date: 1-Jan-2023
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Citation: Morrison, SA (2023-01-01). Moving in a hotter world: Maintaining adequate childhood fitness as a climate change countermeasure. Temperature 10 (2) : 179-197. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1080/23328940.2022.2102375
Abstract: Children cope with high temperatures differently than adults do, largely because of slight alterations in their body proportions and heat loss mechanisms compared to fully mature humans. Paradoxically, all current tools of assessing thermal strain have been developed on adults. As the Earth’s warming continues to accelerate, children are set to bear the health risk brunt of rising global temperatures. Physical fitness has a direct impact on heat tolerance, yet children are less fit and more obese than ever before. Longitudinal research reveals that children have 30% lower aerobic fitness than their parents did at the same age; this deficit is greater than can be recovered by training alone. So, as the planet’s climate and weather patterns become more extreme, children may become less capable of tolerating it. This comprehensive review provides an outline of child thermoregulation and assessment of thermal strain, before moving to summarize how aerobic fitness can modulate hyperthermia, heat tolerance, and behavioral thermoregulation in this under-researched population. The nature of child physical activity, physical fitness, and one’s physical literacy journey as an interconnected paradigm for promoting climate change resilience is explored. Finally, future research foci are suggested to encourage continued exploration of this dynamic field, notable since more extreme, multifactorial environmental stressors are expected to continue challenging the physiological strain of the human population for the foreseeable future.
Source Title: Temperature
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/246023
ISSN: 2332-8940
2332-8959
DOI: 10.1080/23328940.2022.2102375
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