The Chronic Edge Unleashed

System Meltdown: Extreme heat VS chronic illness.

Elliot Evans Season 1 Episode 10

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0:00 | 16:52

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TITLE: System Meltdown - Extreme heat vs chronic illness

SERIES: Behind the Edge

RUN TIME: 17 mins 

Ever felt like the heat is taking over your life? Here's why it doesn't have to!"  
  
Living with chronic illness? 

The heat isn't just uncomfortable; it's a signal. It reveals where our bodies are operating at their limits. For those with conditions like MS, fibromyalgia, or POTS, even a slight temperature rise can amplify fatigue, dizziness, and discomfort.  
  
But here's the good news: understanding this information can help with the tools you need to empower yourself. 

Adjust your workspace, prioritize hydration, and learn your legal rights in the workplace. You have the right to adjustments that support your health.  
  
Remember, you’re not alone in this—your voice matters. 

Let's advocate for a work environment that respects our needs.  
  
What’s your experience with managing work in the heat?  
  
Full resources:

Temperature in the workplace: Heat stress - HSE

Extreme temperatures in the workplace - Acas

Reasonable adjustments: a legal duty - GOV.UK

Adverse Weather and Health Plan - GOV.UK

#ChronicIllness #HeatAwareness #DisabilityRights #Neurodivergence #WellnessAdvocacy

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This is not medical or financial advice, you should always check with a professional and gather your own research, this is purely to get the conversation started.

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For video go to our YouTube channel - @thechronicedgeunleashed 

The Chronic Edge Institute is coming soon - Access data, courses, show episodes, guides etc, and join in the discussion to help us reach a million people and show them that Illness is NOT a burden.

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Illness is not a burden, it is data, use it, and UNLEASH your Edge, I'm Elliot Evans, and I'll see you on the other side.

SPEAKER_00

So let's start without actually happening in our bodies. Extreme heat challenges everyone's ability to regulate temperature. But when you already live with chronic illness, the impact is often amplified because your automatic inflammationally, neurologically, or energy systems are already operating close to their edge. It's up to then that today we are going behind the surface of something many of us are already feeling in our bodies and workplace, which is extreme heat when living with chronic illness. Information about our capacity, our nervous systems, and what our workplaces actually owe us under UK law. Now if you're listening while the temperature is rising, like me, or while you're already managing symptoms that heat makes louder, take a breath with me, and this episode is pace for you. So first off we're going to look at framing. The chronic edge we hold a simple truth. Illness is not a burden, it is information. Heat doesn't create new problems so much as it reveals where our systems already are working close to their limits. For those of us with conditions like MS, fibromyalgia, ME, POTS, arthritis, endometriosis, or any chronic illness that affects energy, pain, or regulation, even a few extra degrees can change everything. Now this episode draws directly from the UK survival guide I created for employees navigating extreme heat. It's grounded in official guidance from the HSC, ACAS, and the Equality Act, plus the lived experience of many of us that share. Now the important note is that this is lived experience and data synthesis. It is not medical, legal, or occupational health advice. Please speak with your GP, specialists, occupational health, reps, and for sport, tailored for you with laws and guidance can change, so always check sources. Take what works for you, leave the rest, your capacity is the priority here. So let's look at heat as information, what the data shows. So let's start with what's actually happening in our bodies. Extreme heat challenges everyone's ability to regulate temperature, but when you already live with chronic illness, the impact is often amplified because your automatic inflammationally, neurologically, or energy systems are already operating close to their edge. In multiclerosis, heat sensitivity, sometimes called unhoffs phenomena, affects a significant number of people. Even a modest rise in core temperature can temporarily worsen fatigue, vision, balance, and cognition. The effects are usually reversible with cooling, but they are disruptive. In fibromyalgia and other related pain conditions, people experience heightened temperature sensitivity. Heat can lower pain thresholds and intensify muscle and joint discomfort. Those with ME or chronic fatigue syndrome and overlapping conditions like POTS, heat promotes blood pooling. This can intensify dizziness, tachycardia, profound fatigue and brain fog. The community of load can pass people through their normal exertion. And in intermediosis, heat often amplifies the inflammational response. Many experience increased swelling, heightened pelvic pain, and greater discomfort. Across chronic illness more broadly, dehydration risks arise sharply. Now some medications interact differently with heat. Sleep fragments, which can often cascade into worse daytime symptoms, the invisible load of simply maintaining function massively increases. What registers as a bit of warmth for others can register as a symptom overload for us. This is not fragility, this or fragility. It is information about where your current capacity sits and what changes would expand it. It is very hot. Now let's talk about what you're actually entitled to. The UK law does not set a maximum workplace temperature. The workplace regulations simply say the temperature must be reasonable. The HSE guidance on heat stress is clear that employers must assess risks, especially for workers who may be more vulnerable because of medical conditions or medication. Under the Equality Act 2010, if your chronic illness has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on your ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities, you are likely protected as a disabled person, and employers have a legal duty to make reasonable adjustments so you are not placed at a substantial disadvantage. Heat can create that disadvantage through escalated symptoms, reduced concentration, safety risks, or the inability to travel comfortably. ACAS guidelines on hot weather specifically notes that workers with health conditions or disabilities may be affected more and that reasonable adjustments must be made. So common adjustments that are often considered reasonable do include the following adjusted or flexible hours to avoid peak heat and hot commutes, remote or hybrid working on the very hot days, provision of fans, better ventilation or portable cooling, more frequent or flexible breaks in cooler areas, modified duties or pacing that supports during heat periods, occupational health referral for a personalized assessment. Put the requests in writing and reference your conditions, impact and legal framework. Keep records. If the response is inadequate, you can escalate to ACAS early, and if that is free and available to you. So let's look at some practical protocols for low energy. So let's move into what you can actually do, starting with the lowest effort options. Hydration. Sip steadily through the day rather than large gulps. Plain water is the baseline. Some people with pots or similar benefit from electrites or increased salt, but this must be personalized. Observe your own response. Pale straw coloured urine is the colour we're going for. Now cooling the body and the environment. Where loose, light-coloured, breathable fabrics position your workspace away from the direct sum where possible. Use blinds, a well-pressed DAS fan, usually about 10 to 40 pounds, direct across the skin makes a massive difference through evaporative cooling. Now, for example, we have a cool air cooler that we place in one of the rooms depending on who's working in what room, and that really helps. It might only just be a little bit, but it massively helps because our house is built like a furnace. Like most houses in the UK, it is built to conserve heat, not to let it escape. This house at the moment feels like I owe it money in relation to the heat. You know, the heat owes money because it ain't going anywhere, it's just getting worse. But we have things in there to help. Now heat adds invisible load. On hot days, consciously reducing total demand, prioritize on what must be done, defer non-urgent work, build in micorecoveries 5 to 10 minutes every 45 to 60 minutes in a cooler spot if needed. If your commute in heat is a consistent flare trigger include it in any adjustment that you make. Now sleep protection. How many of you have been struggling sleeping? Nighttime heat fragments sleep, which then amplifies every symptom the next day. Prioritize bedroom cooling that works for you. A quiet fan, safe ventilation, light bedding, perhaps a cool pack used indirectly. Protect your sleep about the foundation that it is. Now looking at Simpson tracking as data. A simple note of date felt temperature. Start with what costs nothing or very little. Timing changes, clothing adjustments you already own, and behavioral pacing. Many effective adjustments are low or no cost to the employer, yet protect capacity significantly. So let's look at navigating the conversation to know your edge. And when you're ready to ask for support, prepare a clear civic request. State the impact. When the temperature rises or during heat alert, my symptom identifies within a X time frame, resulting in this impact. Propose solutions, reference the Equality Act, SHG guidelines, and offer collaboration. Send it in writing and keep copies. The brutal truth, as you know that's what I'm like, is some organizations move very quickly. Others require repeated documented requests or external involvement. The asking process itself can be draining, so do build in your recovery time. Know the difference between your usual chronic symptoms intensifying in the heat and a constant pattern to apply your protocols and just through the day versus a new and severe signs of heat-related illness. Dizziness is not improving with cooling, confusion, persistent nausea, rapid heart rate rate at rest. In those cases, cool down and seek medical help via NHS 111 or 999 as appropriate. Have a simple plan. Who to call, where the cooler space is, and your key information ready. So let's look at the the longer view on this. Now the UK climate territorially means that one of these periods, building personal resilience is one layer. Refining your toolkit, protecting sleep, and recognizing rising load earlier. The collective layer matters too. Your requests contribute to organizational learning. When one secures practical support, it often eases the path for other people. Now at the Chronic Edge, we see the edge not as a place of deficit, but as refined intelligence. Heat is one of the sharpest teachers. It reveals where redesign is required in our bodies, in our workplace, and in our overall systems for genuine sustainability and inclusion. Now you're not navigating this alone. Small, consistent, evidence-informed steps taken kindly, expand capacity over time. So what about some resources? Why not?

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Why not?

SPEAKER_00

Thanks for listening. I really I really do appreciate it on such a warm day. I don't know when you're gonna listen to this. The full UK survival guide for this episode, based on what is available, is now as a free download, and I will stick it in the show notes. And if you're on LinkedIn and follow myself or the company on LinkedIn, do nip on there because both this and a version for Neurodivergence is on there. I have two versions of a neurodivergence on there. I have the one that is very similar to this one, um, which is full information and everything else, and I have an easier read one, not with images, but it is a little bit more easier to read with larger fonts and broken down a little bit into plainer language and everything. And all three of those documents are available on LinkedIn right now. So just if you follow me on LinkedIn or follow the Chronic Edge on LinkedIn, do go on on there and have a look through our information. You'll see our documents in there as well. You can just download them as you wish. So we're gonna pop in some key UK resources. I'll pop in the HSE Temperature and Heat Stress Guidance, ACAS's hot weather and reasonable adjustments, the government UK's reasonable adjustments information, UKSA adverse weather and health plan with heat health alerts, and you you know the ACAS helpline is 0300 123 1100 or speak to a trusted support worker. So take care of yourself out there. You know, it's that's there's no getting right, it's bloody hot. The heat will come, your body will signal. It's as simple as that. And what remains then is your choice to treat those signals as information worth honoring and request the conditions that let you contribute without erasing yourself. So take care of yourself, subscribe and share. Next week we are back with the strategies for employees with diabetes. I'm gonna try and knock that out today. You know, so welcome to the edge. We adapt here. And remember, illness is not a burden, it is information. Use it and unleash the edge in your career, your business, and your life. I'm Ben Evans, and I'll see you on the other side.