Heat stress prevention is one of the most critical and consistently underestimated responsibilities in industrial and outdoor workplace safety. Unlike a forklift incident or a fall, heat stress builds gradually through rising core temperatures, reduced judgment, and slowing motor function, until a worker is in crisis and everyone around them is asking how it got that far. By the time a heat-related illness becomes visible, the conditions that caused it have typically been present for hours.
For facilities heading into summer, the window to build an effective program is now, before the first heat spike, before the first acclimatization period passes, and before the regulatory environment moves faster than your protocols. Arbill’s approach to heat stress monitoring is built around exactly this kind of proactive planning.
The Scale of the Problem in 2026
Research from George Washington University and Harvard, published in October 2025, found that hot weather causes approximately 28,000 workplace injuries annually, and that these figures do not capture heat-related illnesses that send workers to emergency rooms or cause lost productivity before a formal incident is recorded. The same research found that even moderate heat conditions, well below the thresholds most employers consider dangerous, increased the risk of injury across nearly every industry studied.
The NSC recorded 48 heat-related workplace deaths in 2024 and 7,100 DART cases in the 2023 to 2024 reporting period, and those numbers are widely acknowledged to undercount the true impact because heat is frequently not listed as a contributing cause when workers experience injuries resulting from heat-impaired judgment or coordination.
The regulatory environment is also shifting. OSHA revised and extended its Heat-Related Hazards National Emphasis Program in April 2026, directing inspectors to conduct unplanned heat inspections in high-risk industries. Combined with OSHA’s proposed rule on Heat Injury and Illness Prevention, which would require written prevention plans, heat monitoring, rest breaks, water provision, and acclimatization protocols, compliance pressure on employers is building regardless of whether a final rule has been issued.





