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Barcelona introduces bracelets that monitor heat for outdoor workers

Barcelona introduces bracelets that monitor heat for outdoor workers
Barcelona introduces bracelets that monitor heat for outdoor workers

Barcelona has begun giving out heat-monitoring wristbands to outdoor workers as an early warning system of health risks.

Around 1,400 bracelets have been distributed by the?city to staff who work outdoors. This includes street cleaners and lighting crews as well as park workers, waste management staff, and employees of street cleaning companies.

Pep Llimona is the prevention coordinator for the city's Parks and Gardens service.

The bracelet detects the worker's body temperature, and will emit a vibration and sound if the wearer is in danger. The workers must stop working if this happens.

As temperatures soared in Spain, a number of street workers died. This prompted changes to working patterns and conditions.

A 51-year old woman in Barcelona died last June while sweeping the streets of the city's historic center at temperatures as high as 30.4 degrees Celsius.

Barcelona City Council announced at the time that it would initiate an investigation into death. A spokesperson from the city stated on Thursday that there was no indication of heatstroke as the cause.

Pep Llimona stated that the plan to introduce heat bands was already in place before the woman's demise.

She said, "But it's true that it helped us?to accelerate things and made us think a bit more."

Spain, like a large part of Europe, has experienced sweltering temperatures in the past few weeks. The weather agency Aemet recorded June as being the second hottest month on record. The country is preparing for a second heatwave that will begin at the weekend.

"Because the heat is increasing, we need to be more vigilant at work," Brigade Supervisor Ester Jimenez said.

As the supervisor who assigns tasks to staff... "I'm worried someone could suffer heatstroke and I see the world as being complicated because of this heat". Reporting by Horaci Garca, Writing by Javi Larranaga and Editing by Aislin Laing, Alex Richardson, and Aislin Laing

(source: Reuters)