Abstract

Working as a firefighter is physically strenuous, and a high level of physical fitness increases a firefighter’s ability to cope with the physical stress of their profession. Direct measurements of aerobic capacity, however, are often complicated, time consuming, and expensive. The first aim of the present study was to evaluate the correlations between direct (laboratory) and indirect (field) aerobic capacity tests with common and physically demanding firefighting tasks. The second aim was to give recommendations as to which field tests may be the most useful for evaluating firefighters’ aerobic work capacity. A total of 38 subjects (26 men and 12 women) were included. Two aerobic capacity tests, six field tests, and seven firefighting tasks were performed. Lactate threshold and onset of blood lactate accumulation were found to be correlated to the performance of one work task (rs = −0.65 and −0.63, p<0.01, respectively). Absolute (mL·min−1) and relative (mL·kg−1·min−1) maximal aerobic capacity was correlated to all but one of the work tasks (rs = −0.79 to 0.55 and −0.74 to 0.47, p<0.01, respectively). Aerobic capacity is important for firefighters’ work performance, and we have concluded that the time to row 500 m, the time to run 3000 m relative to body weight (s·kg−1), and the percent of maximal heart rate achieved during treadmill walking are the most valid field tests for evaluating a firefighter’s aerobic work capacity.

Highlights

  • Working as a firefighter is physically strenuous, and rescue during smoke diving with breathing apparatus (BA) is considered the most demanding work performed by firefighters [1,2,3,4,5]

  • The mean treadmill speed was higher for Male full-time firefighters (MFF) and Male part-time firefighters (MPF) compared to civilian women (CW)

  • Completion time for the 30 m crawl test was faster for MFF and MPF compared to CW (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Working as a firefighter is physically strenuous, and rescue during smoke diving with breathing apparatus (BA) is considered the most demanding work performed by firefighters [1,2,3,4,5]. The metabolic demands for firefighters’ work performance, expressed as relative oxygen consumption (VO2 in mL?kg21?min21), range between 16 and 55 mL?kg21?min. Determination of maximal aerobic capacity (VO2max) among firefighters has been performed with both direct measurement of VO2max and indirect estimations. Direct measurement of VO2max, is complicated, time consuming, and expensive and such tests are, less than optimal as a standard procedure within rescue services. It may be more efficient and feasible to test firefighters using indirect estimations of VO2max with the assumption that such indirect tests may serve well for prediction of physical work performance. Maximal anaerobic capacity among firefighters is rarely investigated [16,22,23,24] and, in contrast to aerobic capacity, no minimum limits have ever been suggested

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