An excellant article "Little Things Can Fix a Big Problem on National Healthy Schools Day" written by Claire Barnett, Founder and Executive Director, Healthy Schools Network, Inc., for the Huffpost Heath. Describes what teachers, parents, and facility directors can do, inexpensively, to help improve indoor air quality and help students stay in school. I would add that teachers, staff, and students should avoid using perfumes and colognes in school or any strong smelling deodorants. In addition, teachers and staff should not bring home cleaning supplies to clean their rooms, request from the facility director or the custodians cleaning supplies that are used by the school. Many times I have inspected facilities where the facility has gone to green supplies, only to inspect a classroom to find cleaning supplies not used by the facility (ie, windex, pledge, etc.). It doesn't help being green, if teachers/staff are using non-green cleaning products that they brought from home.
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Thursday, April 28, 2011
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Controversy Regarding Brodeur's Asbestos Research Information at The New York Public Library.
As the title indicates the New York Public Library has notified Mr. Brodeur that they intend on breaking up his collection of papers that he donated to the library. Included in this collection of papers is Mr. Paul Brodeur's investigation of the asbestos health hazard and its cover-up by the asbestos industry. Though I am not a curator or librarian, it seems to be a waste of the research that Mr. Brodeur did to back-up the facts, assertions, and evidence he writes about in his articles. I hope the New York Public Library reconsiders their decision or at least allow the collection to remain together by returning the full documents to Mr. Brodeur.
Related articles
- Paul Brodeur Battles New York Library Over Archives - NYTimes.com (nytimes.com)
- Writers, Historians, Researchers - This One's For You (businessinsider.com)
- CDC's NIOSH corrects statement about asbestos, a known human carcinogen (scienceblogs.com)
- Inspectors Discover Asbestos at East Hampton Middle School (futureenv.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Quebec Government Decides to Back Loan to Restart Asbestos Mine
To justify the decision, Gignac told reporters that millions of people in India die of cholera every year because they lack access to potable water and proper sanitary infrastructure. "Excuse me, but the fact is that chrysotile asbestos cement can be used to make many more kilometres of infrastructure because it is less expensive and is a durable material and we can improve the quality of life of citizens in India," he said.
Related articles
- Cancer society 'disappointed' with Quebec asbestos expansion (canada.com)
- Que. hands $7.5M to asbestos mine (cbc.ca)
- Asbestos Expert Demands Canada Retract "Safe Use" Statement (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- Asbestos mine gets $7.5 million from Quebec (canada.com)
- Air has high asbestos levels at Que. worksites: study (cbc.ca)
- In a Town Called Asbestos, a Plan to Restart the Industry That Made It Prosperous (nytimes.com)
Thursday, April 14, 2011
NIOSH Study Designates Bisphenol A as a Skin Sensitizer
Image via Wikipedia
On April 12, 2011, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) published a skin notation profile for Bisphenol A (BPA). This profile found enough evidence to classify BPA as causing skin sensitization. Sensitization is a specific immune-mediated response (responses mediated by the immune system, including allergic responses) that develops following exposure to a chemical, which, upon re-exposure, can lead to allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) or other immune-mediated diseases such as asthma, depending on the site and route of re-exposure. BPA is a high-production-volume (HPV) chemical used in the manufacturing of epoxy resins, plastics, and flame retardants. NIOSH evaluated several case reports and predictive animal studies that indicated BPA as being a skin sensitizer and can cause photoallergy. Hence, NIOSH has assigned a SK:SEN notation (skin:sensitizer) for BPA. With BPA used as a flame retardant avoiding coming into skin contact with it could be very difficult.
Related articles
- Does the NIOSH Science Blog Improve Communication? (cdc.gov)
- Portfolio Management at NIOSH (cdc.gov)
- Risks Associated with Bisphenol A in Baby Bottles (education.com)
- Skin...Exposed! (cdc.gov)
- Making the Business Case for Prevention through Design (cdc.gov)
- Rapid reduction in Bisphenol-A body levels by using fresh foods (amanwithaphd.wordpress.com)
- Bisphenol A exposures lower in Canadians compared to Americans (eurekalert.org)
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Inspectors Discover Asbestos at East Hampton Middle School
Mold behind sheet rock (asbestos joint compound?). |
Related articles
- New York State Releases FAQ on Asbestos Analysis (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- How to cover your Asbestos insulated plumbing pipes.. (sellinghighpoint.com)
- Dollar Tree Store in Newport fined for asbestos violations; repairs scheduled (newdayunderwriting.wordpress.com)
- All clear for asbestos-affected classroom (news.theage.com.au)
- Asbestos Article in Indoor Environment Discusses Cross Issues with Radon (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- Popcorn ceilings no treat to get rid of (sfgate.com)
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