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RecruitingNCT06979258

Heat Stress Exposure Among Low-Income Residents in Bangladesh and Evaluation of Indoor Interventions

Heat Stress: Exposure Among Low-Income Residents in Bangladesh and Evaluation of Indoor Interventions

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,539 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, Berkeley · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if infrastructure and equipment installed to cool homes reduce adverse health outcomes. The main questions it aims to answer are: What is the impact of the intervention on indoor heat stress? What is the impact of the intervention on personal exposure to heat stress? What is the impact of the intervention on health outcomes, including heart rate, and heart rate variability, and sleep quality? Participants will have cooling infrastructure and/or equipment installed in their home; have heat stress sensors installed inside and outside their home and wear personal heat stress monitors; allow some biological functions such as heat rate, heat rate variability, and sleep quality.

Detailed description

During the last two decades, nearly half a million people died each year from heat-related causes; climate change is expected to exacerbate the burden of adverse health outcomes. Heat stress has been associated with an increase in all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease and mortality, chronic respiratory disease, lower respiratory infection, chronic kidney disease, diabetes, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and poor mental health. The investigators will to determine personal heat stress of low-income individuals who do not have access to air conditioning, evaluate the effectiveness, acceptability, feasibility, and scalability of building-level cooling strategies to reduce indoor heat stress among vulnerable individuals, and evaluate the impact of these interventions on heart rate. A disproportionate burden of heat-related death and disease is borne by low-income communities because they do not have access to cooling and suffer from comorbidities that exacerbate the adverse impacts of heat stress. South Asia faces the greatest current and predicted loss in disability-adjusted life years due to heat stress, and heat stress is particularly strong in informal settlements. As such, the investigators plan to conduct this study in informal settlements in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The overall hypothesis is that individuals who live in homes with corrugated iron roofs and walls are at elevated risk of heat stress and that it is possible to modify homes to prevent increases in heart rate associated with heat stress, ultimately reducing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The investigators will evaluate the impact of cooling infrastructure and/or equipment interventions on residents' heart rate (primary outcome), heart rate variability, sleep quality, self-reported thermal comfort, mental health, wellness, fatigue, and indoor thermal conditions (secondary outcomes).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCooling interventionInfrastructure and/or equipment that cools the house in the hot season

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-12
Primary completion
2029-03-31
Completion
2029-03-31
First posted
2025-05-18
Last updated
2026-02-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Bangladesh

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06979258. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.