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Friday, February 18, 2011
Indoor Environment Connections Discusses Fungal Infection
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Asthma Control Study Indicates a Home Visit Strategy is Successful.
Image via WikipediaIn a study published in Pediatric Allergy, Immunology, and Pulmonology (Volume 23, Number 2, 2010) called “Home Is Where the Triggers Are: Increasing Asthma Control by Improving the Home Environment” by James Krieger, MD, MPH discusses effectiveness of a home visit strategy. A home visit strategy should include an environmental component that addresses multiple triggers. Visitors assess home environmental conditions, tailor education on how to eliminate triggers to the client’s sensitization status and exposures found in the home, provide trigger reduction resources (eg, vacuums, cleaning supplies, bedding encasements and referral to smoking cessation), help with cockroach and rodent integrated pest management, make minor repairs and provide social support. An important part of the strategy is that visitors build trusting relationships with clients, thus enhancing their effectiveness in motivating behavior changes. These home visits reduce exposure to triggers, decrease symptoms and urgent health-care use, and increase quality of life. Home visit program cost per client ranges from $200 to $1500 based on the type of home visitor and the intensity of the intervention. However, a cost-effectiveness analysis concluded that these home visits have a return on investment of 5.3 – 14.0 and a cost of $12 - $57 per symptom-free day gained. It is important to note that the annual cost of inhaled fluticasone (220ug) is approximately $1567. The study discusses the Seattle-King County Healthy Homes program as an example of a successful program.
The study also talks about the strong evidence that links exposure to allergens commonly found in homes such as those derived from dust mites, cockroaches, rodents, molds, and pet dander, to sensitization and subsequent asthma incidence and morbidity. Exposure to indoor allergens is widespread, with >92% of homes containing sufficient concentrations of at least one allergen in dust to cause symptoms in sensitized individuals and 46% with exposure to three or more. In addition to allergens, other indoor asthma triggers include tobacco smoke, nitrogen oxides from combustion devices, irritants from volatile organic compounds, and fungi.
The study also talks about the strong evidence that links exposure to allergens commonly found in homes such as those derived from dust mites, cockroaches, rodents, molds, and pet dander, to sensitization and subsequent asthma incidence and morbidity. Exposure to indoor allergens is widespread, with >92% of homes containing sufficient concentrations of at least one allergen in dust to cause symptoms in sensitized individuals and 46% with exposure to three or more. In addition to allergens, other indoor asthma triggers include tobacco smoke, nitrogen oxides from combustion devices, irritants from volatile organic compounds, and fungi.
Related articles
- Allergic Asthma (findmeacure.com)
- Doubts over mild asthma treatment (bbc.co.uk)
- Occupational Asthma (respiratorytherapycave.blogspot.com)
- Fall and winter asthma triggers (respiratorytherapycave.blogspot.com)
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
NYC Schools In The News Again for PCBs.
Yesterday's Wall Street Journal reported that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found three more schools in New York City with leaking polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) lighting ballasts. The agency took 14 samples from light fixtures at an East Harlem School complex consisting of P.S. 206, P.S. 37 and P.S. 112 and found that 12 were above the regulatory limit. The three schools are located at 508 E. 120th St, Manhattan. This is the fifth school site testing positive for PCBs, other sites included Brooklyn, Staten Island, and Bronx. According to Metro, New York City Department of Education spokeswoman Marge Feinberg said they’ve replaced all the toxic lights found by the EPA thus far, but the estimated cost for checking and/or replacing all the lights in public schools throughout the five boroughs is $1 billion, which NYC does not have. EPA has been studying this problem for years and has produced a website covering the "Proper Maintenance, Removal, and Disposal of PCB-Containing Fluorescent Light Ballasts". The purpose of this website is to provide information to school administrators and maintenance personnel on the risks posed by PCBs in light ballasts, how to properly handle and dispose of these items, and how to properly retrofit the lighting fixtures in your school to remove the potential PCB hazards. The website covers the following areas:
- Why Should I Be Concerned about PCBs in My School?
- What Are the Health Effects of PCBs?
- Do My Fluorescent Light Ballasts Contain PCBs?
- Should the Light Ballasts in My School Be Removed?
- What Should I Do if My Fluorescent Light Ballasts Contain PCBs?
- Is It Really Necessary to Retrofit the PCB-Containing Fluorescent Light Ballasts in My School?
- What Are the Risks and Potential Costs of Not Replacing the PCB-Containing Fluorescent Light Ballasts in My School?
- Are Students and Teachers in Danger if There are Leaking PCB-Containing Light Ballasts in Their School?
- What Are the Special Procedures for Cleanup and Decontamination after a Ballast Leak or Fire?
- How Do I Retrofit the PCB-Containing Fluorescent Light Ballasts in My School?
- What Type of Waste Will Be Associated with a Retrofit and How Do I Handle It?
- What Are the Cost Savings Associated with a Retrofit?
- What if a Retrofit Is Not Feasible in My Current Budget?
Related articles
- Green: PCBs 5, New York 0: School Tests Continue (green.blogs.nytimes.com)
- 3 More NYC Schools Found With Elevated PCBs (newyork.cbslocal.com)
- Letter: Ridding Schools of PCBs (nytimes.com)
- Toxic PCBs Leaking into NYC Schools (inhabitat.com)
- Parents Seek Action on Toxic PCBs in New York Schools (news.change.org)
- EPA Inspection Finds PCBs In Another NYC School (newyork.cbslocal.com)
- PCBs Found in Another School During EPA Spot-Check (wnyc.org)
- EPA Issues Guidance On PCB-Containing Fluorescent Lights (environmentalleader.com)
- EPA warns of PCB-laden school lights (news.cnet.com)
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Asbestos Worries Close Saint Louis Park Schools
Image by angelogarciaiii via FlickrThose of us in the asbestos industry will find the above news story very interesting (find the original news story at StarTribune.com). The officials of St. Louis Park schools in Minnesota were worried that asbestos floor tiles (approximately 10% asbestos) were being worn down, by tracked-in salt and sand, and could be releasing dangerous asbestos. The officials decided to close the city's junior and senior high schools on Monday, February 14, 2011. The schools will remain closed Tuesday as state and school officials work to assess the hazard and determine if other schools face similar problems. Asbestos floor tile was commonly installed in hundreds of 1960s-era schools across the metro area, but it remains unclear how many could still have the asbestos tile or how much risk St. Louis Park students faced, said one expert at the Minnesota Department of Health.
Quoted in the article was Diedra Hudgens, senior project manager at Brooklyn Park-based Institute for Environmental Assessment, or IEA. Her company tested the two St. Louis Park schools for asbestos Monday and Tuesday and will be "taking a closer eye" on the 60 other Minnesota schools it works with. "We're definitely going to be informing our clients -- other school districts -- about what we found, and we'll definitely be taking steps to monitor it," said Diedra Hudgens. "Every district has an elementary school or something this vintage."
So what started this concern of salt and sand releasing asbestos? St. Louis Park school staffers complained late last week about dust outside a school nurse's office, prompting IEA tests on Saturday. A protective wax layer had been worn down by salt and sand tracked in from roads and sidewalks, dulling the floor. As a precautionary measure on Monday, school was dismissed for additional testing at both the high school and the nearby junior high -- which has similar flooring. These tiles were removed from the high school and Monday the school was tested by IEA crews in full protective gear.
What makes this interesting is that the article does not discuss the results of any of the testing done nor does it discuss what type of testing was done? We can only assume that the results must of indicated a need to do something because the schools were closed and the tiles were removed. Since Long Island had alot of snowfall this year, and I'm sure we used more salt and sand this year then in the past, this news story implies that there is an increase potential for the release of asbestos from floor tiles that are subjected to tracked-in salt and sand. It will be interesting to see if and how this story plays out or if it just dies on the vine.
Quoted in the article was Diedra Hudgens, senior project manager at Brooklyn Park-based Institute for Environmental Assessment, or IEA. Her company tested the two St. Louis Park schools for asbestos Monday and Tuesday and will be "taking a closer eye" on the 60 other Minnesota schools it works with. "We're definitely going to be informing our clients -- other school districts -- about what we found, and we'll definitely be taking steps to monitor it," said Diedra Hudgens. "Every district has an elementary school or something this vintage."
So what started this concern of salt and sand releasing asbestos? St. Louis Park school staffers complained late last week about dust outside a school nurse's office, prompting IEA tests on Saturday. A protective wax layer had been worn down by salt and sand tracked in from roads and sidewalks, dulling the floor. As a precautionary measure on Monday, school was dismissed for additional testing at both the high school and the nearby junior high -- which has similar flooring. These tiles were removed from the high school and Monday the school was tested by IEA crews in full protective gear.
What makes this interesting is that the article does not discuss the results of any of the testing done nor does it discuss what type of testing was done? We can only assume that the results must of indicated a need to do something because the schools were closed and the tiles were removed. Since Long Island had alot of snowfall this year, and I'm sure we used more salt and sand this year then in the past, this news story implies that there is an increase potential for the release of asbestos from floor tiles that are subjected to tracked-in salt and sand. It will be interesting to see if and how this story plays out or if it just dies on the vine.
Related articles
- Asbestos experts help with Yasi clean-up (news.theage.com.au)
- Housing Firm Fined after Plumber Exposed to Asbestos (first4lawyers.com)
- Come clean on asbestos in classroom (mirror.co.uk)
- Condo Covered In Asbestos Dust in Virginia Beach, VA (futureenv.blogspot.com)
Tuesday, February 08, 2011
AIHA Registry Programs Launches New Program For XRF Field Measurement Registry
Peeling lead-based paint is an indicator that lead dust may be on the floor and surfaces |
The FMR program is designed to recognize organizations and their affiliated operators that perform in-situ XRF measurements of lead paint surface coatings in the field. The program maintains minimum standards of conduct for all FMR participants through adherence to the programs policies and registration process.
The FMR program will provide:
- Connections – clients, customers, and employers can find or hire the right kind of professional
- Consistency -- standardization of processes and methods across state lines and country borders
- Continuous improvement – a venue for collaboration and sharing of best practices
Registered organizations and enrolled operators perform in-situ field measurements of lead surface coatings utilizing an XRF. Registered organizations have met the qualifications for inclusion on the registry: personnel training, adherence to an established and documented quality system that is based on the most current version of the FMR Policy. All enrolled operators must be affiliated with an FMR Registered organization that oversees the Quality Assurance and Quality Control program that monitors the operator and be properly trained and licensed for the work to be performed.
For general information and information detailing the registry program and processes, please visit the web site: http://www.aiharegistries.org/. For specific inquiries, contact the AIHA Registry Program at info.RegistryLLC@aiha.org.
Related articles
- AIHA Survey Indicates Issues That Concern Industrial Hygiene Profession (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- A Mom Tests Toys for Toxins, Helping to Get the Lead Out (health.change.org)
- BESI Offers First X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Certification for Gypsum Products (pr.com)
Monday, February 07, 2011
Steven Mancuso Is Barred From Practicing Law By Federal Authorities.
As we have discussed in our asbestos refresher classes, and previously in our blog, the Mancuso family is in the news again. This time it is Lawyer Steven Mancuso of Utica, New York being disbarred from practicing law upon his conviction for conspiring with his brother, Paul Mancuso, to cover-up illegal asbestos removal operations. Steven, Paul and their father, Lester Mancuso, were sentenced to three years in federal prison last June.
Image via Wikipedia |
Asbestos fibres - a single fibre is believed to cause mesothelioma |
An attorney since 2002, Steven Mancuso was found guilty in a federal trial for wrongfully aiding his brother in the creation of fraudulent partnerships and submission of false legal documents in an effort to conceal the illegality of Paul Mancuso’s asbestos business. Steven Mancuso denied the charges, yet U.S. District Court Judge Frederick Scullin ruled that he had used his legal skills in the furtherance of his brother’s criminal conspiracy. “When an attorney used his law license to commit crimes and to aid another in the commission of crimes, the appropriate sanction is disbarment,” stated the December 30th ruling. Reports said that Mancuso is currently in the process of appealing to the court, saying that the prosecutors failed to properly handle a variety of legal issues.
Related articles
- Paul Mancuso of Utica New York Ordered to Pay $17,972 to EPA (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- Asbestos Contractor Who Violated Environmental Laws Should Pay Compensation, New York Asbestos Lawyer says (prweb.com)
- Scam-artist asbestos inspector gets jail time (nydailynews.com)
Thursday, February 03, 2011
OSHA Respirator Safety Video
This Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) Respirator Safety Video is a very good introductory video on respirator donning and doffing. Probably will add this to our training classes since it is a very good entry level and refresher video. The video is available in spanish, too.
Related articles
- OSHA Log Form 300A Posting Due February 1, 2011. (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- N95 Respirators and Surgical Masks (cdc.gov)
- Importance of Personal Protective Equipment (futureenv.blogspot.com)
- OSHA Construction Safety Video: OSHA Fall Protection Standards (ehssafetynews.wordpress.com)
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