Day 3: PHYSICAL CAPACITY
Week of Remembrance June 30-July 6
Physical capacity is a vital component of job performance in wildfire suppression activities. The physical work performed is classified by OSHA in the “extremely hard” and the loads carried in the “very heavy” categories. The duration and intensity level of these physical activities is highly variable in most cases and places both short-term and long-term demands on the individual Physical training programs should not just prepare individuals for wildfire suppression activities but also work to manage long-term health of the individual. The ability to handle the physical challenges associated with the occupation can be paramount for employees’ ability to accomplish production goals without undue fatigue and without becoming a hazard to themselves or to coworkers.
Training Specificity: It’s easy to make someone tired…but are you really making them better for what they need? What are the important traits for wildland firefighter (strength, speed, endurance)? How do those interact?
- The key one for long endurance activities is the aerobic threshold. The activity level where our bodies go from primarily using oxygen (aerobic) to non-oxygen (anaerobic) energy pathways. This threshold can change with fitness level.
- A single exercise session should include the following phases:
- Warm-up (5-10 min; low to moderate)
- Stretching ( >10 min of stretching after cool-down)
- Conditioning or sports-related exercise (20-60 min)
- Cool-down (5-10 min; low to moderate)
- Our bodies have different thresholds for this work performed. Last year, physical training injuries were the 3rd highest group of total wildland fire injuries (2015 LLC Incident Review Summary). The biggest principle lacking from physical training programs typically is RECOVERY!
- New MTDC video on Physical Capacity
- Fitness and Work Capacity 2009 Edition (PMS 304-2)
- Are You Fire Fit? (Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center video)
- FireFit website
- Heat Related Illness (WFSTAR video)
The topics for the NWCG “Wildland Firefighter Week of Remembrance” have been drawn from the Human Performance Optimization course taught as a part of the USFS Apprentice Academy in cooperation with the Missoula Technology and Development Center (MTDC) and is rooted in the desire to prepare wildland fire personnel to optimally manage themselves and others at any given time. Review and resources have been contributed by the Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center, NIFC External Affairs, the Wildland Fire annual refresher group, and the Wildland Fire Leadership Subcommittee.
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