Abstract
Thermal comfort affects satisfaction in the workplace, which impacts work efficiency and productivity. Since office workers spend most of their working hours performing sedentary tasks, a scoping review is proposed to contextualize how thermal sensation and thermal comfort are experimentally assessed in the scientific literature. This work presents the scoping review protocol for the scoping review. It follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for systematic review protocols (PRISMA-P). The scoping review will be elaborated based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR). The scoping review will consider peer-reviewed articles written in English, published or in-press. Grey literature and conference papers will be excluded. Only studies performing the experimental assessment of thermal sensation and thermal comfort of human subjects engaged in sedentary activities within homogeneous environments will be considered suitable for the scoping review. Studies will be retrieved from the Journal Storage (JSTOR), PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science databases. The search strategy will consist of the use of the expression ("thermal comfort" OR "therm* sensation" OR "thermosensation") AND ("sedentary" or "office work*" or "office task*"). After removing duplicates, the remaining studies will have their title, abstract, and keywords screened. Studies meeting the eligibility criteria will be selected for full-text screening. Data items will be summarized using summary tables, and their reporting will consider the PRISMA-ScR checklist. The scoping review aims to summarize the existing scientific evidence and identify research needs to experimentally assess the thermal sensation and the thermal comfort of subjects performing sedentary tasks.
Highlights
Humans are highly sensitive to thermal conditions, which affect their physiological state, mood, and behavior (Parsons, 2003)
The scoping review will contextualize the scientific evidence on the experimental assessment of thermal stress (TS) and thermal comfort (TC) while sedentary work is performed in International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Safety, 4:2 (2020) 80-88
The scoping review will be guided by the following research questions: (i) What are the bibliometric aspects of the identified publications? (ii) What are the considered experimental design elements? and (iii) How can studies be classified according to the assessment of TS and TC?
Summary
Humans are highly sensitive to thermal conditions, which affect their physiological state, mood, and behavior (Parsons, 2003). The replacement of manual labor with sedentary work is regarded as a major emerging risk due to the increase of digital work (EU-OSHA, 2018), since about 75% of the working hours of office workers are spent in sedentary activities (Thorp et al, 2012; Toomingas et al, 2012). Considering these aspects, the proposed scoping review aims to address how thermal stress (TS) and thermal comfort (TC) of sedentary individuals in indoor conditions have been assessed in the scientific literature. The present scoping review protocol is not registered in the International prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO), which currently does not accept the registration of scoping reviews, literature reviews, or mapping reviews (NIRH, 2019)
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