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There is no law for a minimum or maximum temperature, but during working hours the temperature in all workplaces inside buildings must be reasonable
Climate change is happening and is due to human activities; along with warming, many other changes are occurring such as melting polar ice, rising sea levels and more frequent floods, droughts and heatwaves.
This page summarises Chapter 2 of the Health Effects of Climate Change (HECC) report with a focus on the impact of heat on temperature and mortality. This is part of the science and stats section for the hazard: heat.
UKHSA has issued a yellow Cold-Health Alert (CHA) for all regions of England, except the South East and London.
Older adults and people with health conditions are at risk of mortality during cold weather. This research explores the experiences of those who care for them.
Special feature article from the March 2022 edition of Energy Trends statistical publication.
The 2023 Health Effects of Climate Change (HECC) report provides an analysis of how climate change makes extreme weather events such as cold, more intense and variable.
Effects, adaptive functional mechanisms specific to reproductive growth stage and strategies to improve heat tolerance
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