Every year it happens the same way. The weather turns, the boots go back on, and within the first few weeks of the summer field season, someone ends up in the medical tent - heat exhaustion, a flare-up of an unmanaged condition, or a near-miss that could have been avoided with a little forethought. Sound familiar?
Pre-season health readiness isn't about ticking a compliance checkbox. It's about genuinely preparing your workforce before the heat, the pace, and the pressure of the summer season expose the gaps. Here's what a clinical playbook for OHS leads actually looks like in practice.
The most effective pre-season programs begin with a functional health snapshot - not just a form asking workers to self-declare whether they're fit for duty (we all know how that goes). A proper pre-placement or pre-season health assessment considers:
It's tempting to treat heat illness and UV exposure as separate issues with separate toolbox talks. Clinically, they interact. Prolonged UV exposure contributes to dehydration and skin barrier stress, which compounds heat load and recovery. Workers in energy and mining environments often face both simultaneously - long hours in direct sun with limited shade access and inconsistent hydration habits.
A pre-season playbook should include UV risk mapping for your sites, shade access planning, hydration protocols that are actually achievable (not just theoretically correct), and skin cancer surveillance reminders - because field workers accumulate significant lifetime UV exposure and most aren't seeing a GP regularly enough to catch early changes.
One of the most practical things an OHS lead can do before the season kicks off is audit the escalation pathway. If a worker shows signs of heat exhaustion at a remote site at 2pm on a Wednesday - who makes the call, what's the protocol, and how far is the nearest clinical support? These conversations are far easier to have in April than mid-July.
Pre-season is also the right time to brief site supervisors on early symptom recognition. Heat illness escalates fast. The difference between a recoverable episode and a medical emergency is often the 20 minutes between "he seems a bit off" and "someone call for help."
Here's the clinical reality that doesn't get said often enough: fit for duty isn't a status you assign once at the start of the season and forget. It changes with sleep deprivation, illness, medication changes, personal stressors, and acclimatization. Workers who were fit in Week 1 may be struggling by Week 6 - especially in physically demanding environments.
The best programs build in touchpoints throughout the season, not just at the start. That might be brief supervisor check-ins, periodic health monitoring for high-risk roles, or a low-barrier pathway for workers to raise concerns without fear of being stood down unnecessarily.
Eisan Consulting works with OHS teams in energy, mining, and construction to build clinical health readiness programs that are practical, evidence-based, and actually implemented. Get in touch before your season starts.