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Factors affecting the intrusiveness and selection of real-site data collection methods in hot and humid climates: critical review

Ammar Moohialdin (School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Fiona Lamari (School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Marc Miska (School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia)
Bambang Trigunarsyah (School of Property, Construction and Project Management, RMIT University College of Design and Social Context, Melbourne, Australia)

Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management

ISSN: 0969-9988

Article publication date: 30 November 2020

Issue publication date: 2 November 2021

404

Abstract

Purpose

Hot and humid climates (HHCs) are potential environmental hazards that directly affect construction workers' health and safety (HS) and negatively impact workers' productivity. Extensive research efforts have addressed the effects of HHCs. However, these efforts have been inconsistent in their approach for selecting factors influencing workers in such conditions. There are also increasing concerns about the drop-off in research interest to follow through intrusive and non-real-time measurements. This review aims to identify the major research gaps in measurements applied in previous research with careful attention paid to the factors that influence the intrusiveness and selection of the applied data collection methods.

Design/methodology/approach

This research integrates a manual subjective discussion with a thematic analysis of Leximancer software and an elaborating chronological, geographical and methodological review that yielded 701 articles and 76 peer-reviewed most related articles.

Findings

The literature included the physiological parameters as influencing factors and useful indicators for HHC effects and identified site activity intensity as the most influencing work-related factor. In total, three main gaps were identified: (1) the role of substantial individual and work-related factors; (2) managerial interventions and the application of the right time against the right symptoms, sample size and measurement intervals and (3) applied methods of data collection; particularly, the intrusiveness of the utilised sensors.

Practical implications

The focus of researchers and practitioners should be in applying nonintrusive, innovative and real-time methods that can provide crew-level measurements. In particular, methods that can represent the actual effects of allocated tasks are aligned with real-time weather measurements, so proactive HHC-related preventions can be enforced on time.

Originality/value

This review contributes to the field of construction workers' safety in HHCs and enables researchers and practitioners to identify the most influential individual and work-related factors in HHCs. This review also proposes a framework for future research with suggestions to cover the highlighted research gaps and contributes to a critical research area in the construction industry.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The first author would like to express thanks for the PhD scholarship provided by the Queensland University of Technology.

Citation

Moohialdin, A., Lamari, F., Miska, M. and Trigunarsyah, B. (2021), "Factors affecting the intrusiveness and selection of real-site data collection methods in hot and humid climates: critical review", Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management, Vol. 28 No. 9, pp. 2300-2336. https://doi.org/10.1108/ECAM-10-2019-0583

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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