From aerobics to hot yoga: Ways to raise tolerance for warmer weather
Health & Fitness

From aerobics to hot yoga: Ways to raise tolerance for warmer weather

SINGAPORE – Exercise is not only key to good health but also to heat-proofing oneself against rising temperatures.

In particular, aerobic exercises such as running, cycling and skipping rope can help people adapt to heat by lowering their bodies’ core temperature and triggering earlier and faster sweating to help the skin cool down.

Such cardio workouts also lower the heart rate, allowing the body to function more efficiently, said associate consultant Joshua Li from Changi General Hospital’s department of sport and exercise medicine.

Simply Science finds out how people can use cardio as a weapon to fight the heat.

Heat acclimatisation helps to reduce the risk of heat injury and improve the safety of people who work or exercise in the heat.

Construction workers, soldiers and marathon runners are not unfamiliar with the concept of acclimatising to warmer conditions. In Singapore, new construction workers – especially those hailing from colder climates – and those returning from prolonged leave must undergo a two-week heat acclimatisation programme.

This involves gradually exposing employees to Singapore’s heat and humidity, and increasing the duration and intensity of work over the fortnight.

Scientists globally have been studying how ordinary people, especially the ageing population, can similarly build up their resilience to rising temperatures and brace themselves for heatwaves.

Dr Li noted that people who live in Singapore have already adapted to the climate, and most are able to tolerate small increases in temperature. The question is whether they are heat-acclimatised to the type of outdoor work required of them under the scorching sun.

“Heat injuries, including death, may occur when there is a sudden and marked increase in temperature – for example, a heatwave,” he said.

The trick to acclimatising properly and safely is to start with a good level of fitness.

Associate Professor Jason Lee from the National University of Singapore’s Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine (NUS Medicine), said: “If one is unfit, the recommendation is to attain a certain level of fitness before embarking on heat acclimatisation. Being aerobically fit per se is a very effective measure to beat the heat.”

Individuals can start by exercising in cooler environments to build their baseline aerobic fitness. Then they can move to a hot environment and slowly increase their exercise duration and intensity over two to three weeks, added Prof Lee, who is also director of the Heat Resilience and Performance Centre at NUS Medicine.

Dr Li recommends increasing the intensity and duration of outdoor physical work by 20 per cent each day.

“Doing light or brief physical work in the heat will acclimatise the individual only to light, brief work. More strenuous or longer tasks require more acclimatisation,” he added.

Both experts stressed the need to rest well and cool off in between sessions.

People with chronic diseases such as diabetes and heart disease can also raise their aerobic fitness within their means after consulting their doctors. But they should stop or seek medical attention when they feel the effects of heat strain, giddiness or chest pain, among other issues.

Some treatments for chronic diseases, such as blood thinners, Alzheimer’s medications and some chemotherapy drugs, can hinder the body’s ability to lose heat and regulate core temperature.