Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.

The seasonal profession of wildland fire fighting in Canada requires individuals to work in harsh environmental conditions that are physically demanding. The purpose of this study was to use novel technologies to evaluate the physiological demands and nutritional practices of Canadian FireRangers du...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A H Robertson, C Larivière, C R Leduc, Z McGillis, T Eger, A Godwin, M Larivière, S C Dorman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249212?pdf=render
id doaj-85fe06f58471472dbc30362849d13ea3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-85fe06f58471472dbc30362849d13ea32020-11-24T20:50:16ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01121e016939010.1371/journal.pone.0169390Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.A H RobertsonC LarivièreC R LeducZ McGillisT EgerA GodwinM LarivièreS C DormanThe seasonal profession of wildland fire fighting in Canada requires individuals to work in harsh environmental conditions that are physically demanding. The purpose of this study was to use novel technologies to evaluate the physiological demands and nutritional practices of Canadian FireRangers during fire deployments.Participants (n = 21) from a northern Ontario Fire Base volunteered for this study and data collection occurred during the 2014 fire season and included Initial Attack (IA), Project Fire (P), and Fire Base (B) deployments. Deployment-specific energy demands and physiological responses were measured using heart-rate variability (HRV) monitoring devices (Zephyr BioHarness3 units). Food consumption behaviour and nutrient quantity and quality were captured using audio-video food logs on iPod Touches and analyzed by NutriBase Pro 11 software.Insufficient kilocalories were consumed relative to expenditure for all deployment types. Average daily kilocalories consumed: IA: 3758 (80% consumption rate); P: 2945±888.8; B: 2433±570.8. Average daily kilocalorie expenditure: IA: 4538±106.3; P: 4012±1164.8; B: 2842±649.9. The Average Macronutrient Distribution Range (AMDR) for protein was acceptable: 22-25% (across deployment types). Whereas the AMDR for fat and carbohydrates were high: 40-50%; and low: 27-37% respectively, across deployment types.This study is the first to use the described methodology to simultaneously evaluate energy expenditures and nutritional practices in an occupational setting. The results support the use of HRV monitoring and video-food capture, in occupational field settings, to assess job demands. FireRangers expended the most energy during IA, and the least during B deployments. These results indicate the need to develop strategies centered on maintaining physical fitness and improving food practices.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249212?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A H Robertson
C Larivière
C R Leduc
Z McGillis
T Eger
A Godwin
M Larivière
S C Dorman
spellingShingle A H Robertson
C Larivière
C R Leduc
Z McGillis
T Eger
A Godwin
M Larivière
S C Dorman
Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
PLoS ONE
author_facet A H Robertson
C Larivière
C R Leduc
Z McGillis
T Eger
A Godwin
M Larivière
S C Dorman
author_sort A H Robertson
title Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
title_short Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
title_full Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
title_fullStr Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
title_full_unstemmed Novel Tools in Determining the Physiological Demands and Nutritional Practices of Ontario FireRangers during Fire Deployments.
title_sort novel tools in determining the physiological demands and nutritional practices of ontario firerangers during fire deployments.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description The seasonal profession of wildland fire fighting in Canada requires individuals to work in harsh environmental conditions that are physically demanding. The purpose of this study was to use novel technologies to evaluate the physiological demands and nutritional practices of Canadian FireRangers during fire deployments.Participants (n = 21) from a northern Ontario Fire Base volunteered for this study and data collection occurred during the 2014 fire season and included Initial Attack (IA), Project Fire (P), and Fire Base (B) deployments. Deployment-specific energy demands and physiological responses were measured using heart-rate variability (HRV) monitoring devices (Zephyr BioHarness3 units). Food consumption behaviour and nutrient quantity and quality were captured using audio-video food logs on iPod Touches and analyzed by NutriBase Pro 11 software.Insufficient kilocalories were consumed relative to expenditure for all deployment types. Average daily kilocalories consumed: IA: 3758 (80% consumption rate); P: 2945±888.8; B: 2433±570.8. Average daily kilocalorie expenditure: IA: 4538±106.3; P: 4012±1164.8; B: 2842±649.9. The Average Macronutrient Distribution Range (AMDR) for protein was acceptable: 22-25% (across deployment types). Whereas the AMDR for fat and carbohydrates were high: 40-50%; and low: 27-37% respectively, across deployment types.This study is the first to use the described methodology to simultaneously evaluate energy expenditures and nutritional practices in an occupational setting. The results support the use of HRV monitoring and video-food capture, in occupational field settings, to assess job demands. FireRangers expended the most energy during IA, and the least during B deployments. These results indicate the need to develop strategies centered on maintaining physical fitness and improving food practices.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5249212?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT ahrobertson noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT clariviere noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT crleduc noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT zmcgillis noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT teger noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT agodwin noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT mlariviere noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
AT scdorman noveltoolsindeterminingthephysiologicaldemandsandnutritionalpracticesofontariofirerangersduringfiredeployments
_version_ 1716804215102242816