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Some construction
materials can cause serious problems if they get on your skin. Some burns
can even put you in the hospital. Sometimes you can get a skin infection
that can risk your life. Or some of the materials can go through your
skin and make you sick.
Sometimes you can become allergic to a material at work and get
skin problems. They can be so bad that you cannot work — even with tiny
amounts of the material. In that case, you may have to change careers.
Some materials that can hurt your skin
| Wet cement |
Epoxy resins |
| Some cement
dusts |
Alcohols |
| Lime |
Toluene |
| Metalworking
fluids |
Turpentine |
| Some paints |
Xylene |
| Adhesives |
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These materials
can cause red, itchy, scaly skin or painful burns, ulcers, and rashes
like acne — all known as contact dermatitis. Also, pitch and coal tar
can cause skin cancer.
For all these
materials, use mild, non-abrasive soaps. Try not to use a solvent
to clean your hands. (Alcohol, mineral spirits, turpentine, and limonene
are solvents.) Solvents can irritate your skin and make you very sick.
Try mineral oil or vegetable oil with soap and water.
Some soaps can hurt your skin, if you work with caustics
like lime or wet cement. (Soaps that remove caustics and do not cause
more damage are pH neutral.)
You can use these bar soaps.
Caress
Oil of Olay
Dove
You can use these liquid soaps
| Aloe Vera 80 |
Lever 2000 |
| Cetaphil |
Neutrogena |
| Dial |
Rainbath |
| Dove |
Noxema |
| Gillette Wash |
Oil of Olay |
| Ivory |
pHisoderm |
| Jergens |
Softsoap |
After you finish
work, wash with soap, rinse with water, and dry your hands with clean
cloth or paper. After that you can use mineral oil, petroleum jelly (vaseline),
or oil-based lotions. Try not to use lotions that have lanolin, limonene
(citrus solvent), or perfumes.
If
you use work gloves, make sure your hands and the insides of the gloves
are clean and dry when you put on the gloves. If your hands have any
of the harsh materials on them when you put on gloves, you can make your
skin problems worse. (Don't let the materials get inside your boots, either.)
Make sure you
use the right gloves for the job. Some gloves will not protect you
from some of the materials. Or the gloves may not protect you for a whole
work shift.
If you have a
skin problem that won't go away, see a doctor. Tell your doctor what
materials you use at work.
Put on sunscreen
with a sun protection factor (SPF) of 15 or more before
you work outdoors, even on cloudy days. Do this even if you have dark
skin. Make sure your hands and skin are clean before you put on
sunscreen.
Wear a long-sleeved
shirt. It can help protect your skin from the harmful materials and
from sunburn. Try not to get your clothes wet with cement or other harsh
materials. (Pitch, asphalt, and coal tar can be especially harmful if
you are in the sun. When you work with hot asphalt, do not wear synthetic
materials like polyesters or nylon; they melt when they touch hot asphalt.)
When you get home,
do not wash your work clothes with other clothes. You want to keep
any harmful materials from work off your and your family's clothes.
For more information,
call your local union, joint apprenticeship training fund, CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (CPWR) (301-578-8500 or www.cpwr.com
), the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (1-800-35-NIOSH
or www.cdc.gov/niosh
), or OSHA (1-800-321-OSHA or www.osha.gov). Or check the website www.elcosh.org.
This paper appears in the eLCOSH website with the permission of the author
and/or copyright holder and may not be reproduced without their consent. eLCOSH is an
information clearinghouse. eLCOSH and its sponsors are not responsible for the accuracy of
information provided on this web site, nor for its use or misuse.
© 2003, CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training. All rights reserved. CPWR
is a research, development, and training arm of the Building and Construction
Trades Dept., AFL-CIO: CPWR, Suite 1000, 8484 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring,
MD 20910. (Edward C. Sullivan is president of the Building and Construction
Trades Dept. and of CPWR and Joseph Maloney is secretary-treasurer.) Production
of this card was supported by grant CCU317202 from the National Institute
for Occupational Safety and Health and grants U45-ES09764 and U45-ES06185
from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The contents
are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent
the official views of NIOSH or NIEHS. Skin problems - 12/9/03
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