Glossary

Heat Exhaustion

Heat exhaustion is the body's warning that it is losing the fight to stay cool: heavy sweating, weakness, dizziness, nausea, headache, and cool, clammy skin. It is serious but reversible, and it is the stage right before the medical emergency of heat stroke.

Last updated July 9, 2026 · Live data refreshes every 15 min

Recognizing it

Watch for heavy sweating with cool, pale, clammy skin; a fast, weak pulse; muscle cramps; tiredness or weakness; dizziness or headache; and nausea. The person is usually still sweating and still mentally clear. Catching it here, and stopping activity, is what prevents the far more dangerous next stage.

The line to heat stroke

Heat stroke is a life-threatening emergency. The tells are hot skin (sweating may have stopped), a temperature that keeps rising, and, most importantly, changes in mental status: confusion, slurred speech, agitation, or collapse. If you see those, call emergency services and start cooling the person immediately with water, ice, or wet cloths while you wait.

Why the USVI raises the risk

High humidity means sweat evaporates poorly, so the body's cooling runs at a deficit, and full tropical sun adds radiant load a thermometer never shows. That combination is exactly what WBGT measures, which is why watching the WBGT band, taking shade and water breaks, and pacing exertion are the practical defenses. Infants, older adults, and people on certain medications reach exhaustion sooner.

This page is general education, not medical advice. In an emergency, contact local emergency services.

Frequently asked questions

How do I tell heat exhaustion from heat stroke?
Heat exhaustion usually keeps the person sweating, with cool, clammy skin and a normal-ish mental state. Heat stroke is a medical emergency: hot skin, confusion, slurred speech, or collapse, often with sweating stopped. If mental status changes, call for emergency help and cool the person immediately.
What should I do for heat exhaustion?
Move to shade or air conditioning, lie down, loosen clothing, sip water or an electrolyte drink, and cool the skin with wet cloths or fanning. Recovery should begin within 30 minutes. If symptoms worsen or mental status changes, treat it as heat stroke and seek emergency care.