OSHA's Increasing Focus on Heat-Related Illness

Heat-related illness kills an average of 43 workers per year in the United States and sends thousands more to the emergency room. As climate conditions intensify, OSHA has significantly increased its enforcement focus on heat hazards through its National Emphasis Program (NEP) on Heat, which has been active since 2022.

While OSHA's proposed heat-specific standard is still making its way through the rulemaking process in 2026, employers are already being cited under the General Duty Clause (Section 5(a)(1)) for failing to protect workers from known heat hazards. Having a written heat illness prevention program is now a practical necessity, not just a best practice.

Water, Rest, and Shade: The Foundation

OSHA's recommended framework for heat illness prevention centers on three fundamental elements:

Water

  • Provide access to cool, potable water at all times — workers should not have to leave the work area to access drinking water
  • Encourage workers to drink at least one cup (8 oz) of water every 15-20 minutes during hot conditions
  • Don't wait until workers are thirsty — by that point, dehydration has already begun
  • Avoid caffeine, sugary drinks, and energy drinks — they can worsen dehydration

Rest

  • Provide scheduled rest breaks in shaded or air-conditioned areas
  • Increase rest frequency as heat index rises
  • At heat index above 103°F: a minimum of 15 minutes rest for every 45 minutes of work
  • Monitor workers during rest breaks for signs of heat illness

Shade

  • Provide access to shaded rest areas that are close to the work site
  • Shade structures should be large enough to accommodate all resting workers simultaneously without contact with each other
  • When shade structures aren't feasible, provide alternative cooling measures (cooling vests, misting fans, air-conditioned vehicles)

Heat Index Action Levels

OSHA's guidance uses the heat index (a combination of temperature and humidity) to trigger protective actions:

Heat IndexRisk LevelRequired Actions
Below 80°FLower (caution)Provide water, basic planning, shade available
80°F - 90°FModerateWater reminders, acclimatization for new workers, shade breaks
91°F - 103°FHighActive water/rest enforcement, mandatory rest in shade, buddy system
Above 103°FVery High to ExtremeAggressive rest scheduling, constant monitoring, consider rescheduling work

Important: Direct sunlight adds up to 15°F to the heat index. Workers in full sunlight at a measured heat index of 95°F may effectively be working in 110°F conditions. Factor this into your planning.

Acclimatization: The Most Critical Control

Acclimatization — the process by which the body adapts to working in heat — is perhaps the single most important factor in preventing heat illness deaths. OSHA data shows that 50-70% of outdoor fatalities from heat occur in the first few days of working in hot conditions.

Acclimatization Guidelines

  • New workers — Start at no more than 20% of the normal workload on Day 1, increasing by no more than 20% each subsequent day
  • Returning workers — Workers returning after an absence of one week or more should follow the same gradual increase
  • Everyone during heat waves — When temperatures spike significantly above recent conditions, all workers need additional monitoring and rest, even if they were previously acclimatized

Emergency Response Procedures

Your heat illness prevention program must include procedures for responding to heat-related emergencies:

Recognizing Heat Illness

  • Heat cramps — Painful muscle spasms, usually in legs or abdomen. Respond with rest, fluids, and cooling.
  • Heat exhaustion — Heavy sweating, weakness, cold/clammy skin, fast/weak pulse, nausea. Move to shade, apply cool compresses, seek medical evaluation if symptoms don't improve.
  • Heat stroke — Body temperature above 103°F, hot/dry skin (no sweating), rapid pulse, confusion, loss of consciousness. This is a medical emergency — call 911 immediately. Begin aggressive cooling while waiting for EMS.

Emergency Action Steps

  1. Call 911 immediately if heat stroke is suspected
  2. Move the worker to a cool, shaded area
  3. Remove excess clothing
  4. Apply cold compresses to neck, armpits, and groin
  5. Provide cool water if the worker is conscious and can drink
  6. Do not leave the worker alone — maintain continuous monitoring

State-Specific Requirements

Several states have enacted heat illness prevention standards that are more stringent than federal OSHA:

  • California — Cal/OSHA's Heat Illness Prevention Standard (Title 8, Section 3395) is the most comprehensive, requiring shade at 80°F and High Heat Procedures above 95°F
  • Washington — Outdoor Heat Exposure rule (WAC 296-62-095) requires action at specific temperature triggers
  • Oregon — Adopted heat illness prevention rules following the 2021 heat dome event
  • Colorado, Maryland, Minnesota — Have enacted or proposed their own heat standards

A well-written heat illness prevention program template provides the framework to meet both federal guidance and state-specific requirements. Pair it with heat safety toolbox talks and daily site inspection forms that include heat monitoring checkpoints.

Download Ready-to-Use Templates

Save hours with professionally developed, OSHA-compliant safety document templates. Instant download, fully customizable.

Browse Templates on Etsy