Abstract

This paper describes a Cold Weather Ensemble Decision Aid (CoWEDA) that provides guidance for cold weather injury prevention, mission planning, and clothing selection. CoWEDA incorporates current science from the disciplines of physiology, meteorology, clothing, and computer modeling. The thermal performance of a cold weather ensemble is defined by endurance times, which are the time intervals from initial exposure until the safety limits are reached. These safety limits correspond to conservative temperature thresholds that provide a warning of the approaching onset of frostbite and/or hypothermia. A validated six-cylinder thermoregulatory model is used to predict human thermal responses to cold while wearing different ensembles. The performance metrics, model, and a database of clothing properties were integrated into a user-friendly software application. CoWEDA is the first tool that allows users to build their own ensembles from the clothing menu (i.e., jackets, footwear, and accessories) for each body region (i.e., head, torso, lower body, hands, feet) and view their selections in the context of physiological strain and the operational consequences. Comparison of predicted values to skin and core temperatures, measured during 17 cold exposures ranging from 0 to −40°C, indicated that the accuracy of CoWEDA prediction is acceptable, and most predictions are within measured mean ± SD. CoWEDA predicts the risk of frostbite and hypothermia and ensures that a selected clothing ensemble is appropriate for expected weather conditions and activities. CoWEDA represents a significant enhancement of required clothing insulation (IREQ, ISO 11079) and wind chill index-based guidance for cold weather safety and survival.

Highlights

  • Cold weather is a persistent danger during outdoor activities (Imray and Oakley 2005)

  • The objective of our work is to develop software that addresses all of the complicated requirements needed for cold protection and to quantify the thermal performance of cold weather ensembles

  • The metrics focus on the safety or performance of the person and quantifies the protection level needed by a cold weather ensemble to maintain safe temperatures

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Summary

Introduction

Cold weather is a persistent danger during outdoor activities (Imray and Oakley 2005). Cold stress has deleterious effects on health, performance, and military readiness and may eventually lead to cold injuries, e.g., frostbite and life-threatening hypothermia (Castellani and Tipton 2015; Holmer 2009; DeGroot et al 2003; Imray and Oakley 2005). Despite advancements in personal protective equipment, cold injuries continue to affect active military and civilian personnel. Wearing cold weather clothing is the primary way to reduce cold injury (Heil et al 2016) and is expected to provide protection against both extremity cold injuries and hypothermia. Selection of adequate cold weather ensembles is a vital mitigation strategy for preventing cold injury

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