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ESA's LeadCare ASV instrument
RESEARCHER: Lauralynn Taylor
AFFILIATION:
Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4571
PURPOSE: Validate an anodic stripping voltammetry
instrument that analyzes capillary and venous blood lead levels rapidly
in the field.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: It is estimated that more than
30,000 individuals in the United States have work-related blood lead levels
above 25 µg/dL. OSHA, EPA, and HUD require exposure monitoring for both
blood lead and environmental lead levels. Currently, the blood monitoring
methods require a venipuncture blood draw and shipment to an off-site laboratory
for analysis.
An anodic stripping voltammetry instrument has been developed by ESA, Inc.,
Chelmsford, MA, in conjunction with CDC. This instrument provides a prompt,
cost-effective technique to monitor lead exposures for pediatric screening.
Although this instrument has only been used with children whose blood lead
levels are significantly lower than in exposed adults, its capability to
analyze blood quickly on-site makes it potentially valuable to occupational
health professionals during on-site investigations, particularly with highly
transient workers such those in construction. We will compare instrument
results with split samples analyzed according to CDC's Whole Blood Method
1080C from adult populations exposed to high lead levels. The practicality
and cost-effectiveness of using this instrument in the workplace will be
assessed and its precision estimated.
A second objective of this project is to collect samples from earlobe capillaries
and determine whether these samples can be used to monitor blood lead levels.
This sampling and analytical technique is less invasive and could provide
quicker results than current methods, guiding efforts to reduce lead exposures
rapidly.
KEYWORDS: Lead, biomarkers, exposure assessment
RECENT CITATIONS:
Taylor, L., R.L. Jones, L. Kwan, J.A. Deddens, K.A. Ashley, and W.T. Sanderson.
2001. Evaluation of a portable blood lead analyzer with occupationally exposed
populations. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, v. 40, no.
3, pp. 54-362.
Taylor, L., R.L. Jones, L. Kwan, J.A. Deddens, K.A. Ashley, and W.T. Sanderson.
2000. Blood lead monitoring technologies. Presentation at Council and State
Territory Epidemiologists Conference, New Orleans, LA, June 2000.
Taylor, L., R.L. Jones, L. Kwan, J.A. Deddens, K.A. Ashley, and W.T. Sanderson.
2000. Blood lead monitoring: An evaluation of a rapid blood lead analyzer.
Presentation at American Industrial Hygiene Conference, Orlando, FL, May
2000.

RESEARCHER: Jennifer Hornsby-Myers
AFFILIATION:
Health Effects Laboratory Division
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-6358
PURPOSE: Design and develop prototype personal-location
units that can be used in conjunction with appropriate monitoring devices
both indoors and outdoors to assess safety and health hazards in the workplace.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Workers in many occupations move about
frequently during a typical workday. Certain workers, such as agricultural
and construction workers, are particularly mobile. By linking a worker's
location throughout the workday to real-time monitors of hazardous materials,
local positioning system (LPS) units with data processing capabilities could
identify and document where to focus exposure analyses and control efforts.
Post-processing of LPS data may enable researchers, regulatory inspectors,
and industry safety and health personnel to map the location, distribution,
and intensity of a hazardous material. In addition, LPS units may allow
researchers to explore new means of detecting, analyzing, and controlling
safety and health hazards.
An outdoor backpack prototype was reduced to a hand-held prototype. This
smaller prototype will be field tested with real-time exposure sensors (dust,
noise, temperature, and a gas monitor) to determine its performance. LPS
units will use industry-standard connectors to input data from portable
exposure monitors. Work conducted in collaboration with the U.S. Coast Guard
Academy's Center for Advanced Studies has shown direct-sequence spread-spectrum
technology to be feasible for indoor positioning when using military frequencies.
The NIOSH LPS design will allow easier set-up at research sites than do
existing monitors and will allow the device to be used on unlicensed civilian
frequencies. The indoor LPS should provide information on indoor air quality
and noise levels.
KEYWORDS: Control technology, exposure assessment, hazards
RECENT CITATIONS:
Hornsby-Myers, J.L., L. Lee, and M. Flemmer. 2002. Field testing of local
positioning system. Poster presentation at Salt Fork X, Mineral Wells, WV.
RESEARCHER: Kevin Ashley
AFFILIATION:
Division of Applied Research and Technology
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4402
PURPOSE: Provide methods and technologies for on-site
screening of metals in workplace samples to allow worker exposure and the
effectiveness of control measures to be assessed in a timely manner.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Several million workers in the
United States are exposed to toxic metals on the job. Traditional exposure
monitoring techniques requiring laboratory analysis are not always useful
in the construction industry because results may not be available quickly
enough to avoid overexposures or prolonged shutdown periods. Therefore,
new methods for monitoring metals on-site, including metal species not previously
investigated, need to be developed and evaluated so that information about
worker exposures can be provided rapidly or, in some cases, even before
work begins.
Although several portable analysis technologies and methods for measuring
concentrations of airborne metals have been developed recently, they have
not seen wide use in the workplace. This may be due to expense, complexity,
poor limits of detection or accuracy relative to laboratory-based analysis,
and nonacceptance by regulatory agencies. For example, portable anodic stripping
voltammetry (ASV) and portable x-ray fluorescence (XRF) have recently been
field-tested at construction and mining sites in collaborative work with
the Spokane Research Laboratory; the Health Effects Laboratory Division;
and the Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies.
Other emerging technologies, such as laser- and spark-induced breakdown
spectroscopy, show strong potential to provide real-time or near-real-time
readings of airborne metal concentrations, but need to be fully developed
and evaluated if they are to be considered for use as portable screening
technologies for workplace applications. These collaborations will afford
more comprehensive development and assessments of the performance and cost-effectiveness
of portable technology in many workplace settings.
The refinement and careful testing of existing field-portable methods, along
with the development of new ones, could herald a generation of simplified
instruments and tools capable of providing rugged, accurate, and cost-effective
screening for numerous airborne metals in the workplace on a near-real-time
basis.
PATENT: Esswein, E., M. Boeniger, and K. Ashley.
2001. Handwipe disclosing method for the presence of lead. U.S. Patent 6,248,593.
KEYWORDS: Screening methods, exposure assessment
RECENT CITATIONS:
Sussell, A., and K. Ashley. 2002. Field measurement of lead
in work-place air and paint chip samples by ultrasonic extraction and portable
anodic stripping voltammetry. Journal of Environmental Monitoring,
v. 4, pp. 156-161.
Song, R., P.C. Schlecht, and K. Ashley. 2001. Field screening test methods:
Performance criteria and performance characteristics. Journal of Hazardous
Materials, v. 83, pp. 29-39.
Ashley, K., T.J. Wise, W. Mercado, and D.B. Parry. 2001. Ultrasonic extraction
and field-portable anodic stripping voltammetric measurement of lead in
dust wipe samples. Journal of Hazardous Materials, v. 83, pp. 41-50.
Marlow, D., J. Wang, T. J. Wise, and K. Ashley. 2000. Field test of a port-able
method for the determination of hexavalent chromium in workplace air. American
Laboratory, v. 32, no. 15, pp. 26-28.
RESEARCHER: Ernest
Moyer
AFFILIATION:
Division of Respiratory Disease Studies
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-5962
PURPOSE: Evaluate
aerosol exposure reduction resulting from the use of enclosed cabs.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Construction workers, as well as workers in numerous other occupations such
as mining, farming, and trucking, depend on enclosed environmental cabs
to protect them from hazardous aerosols while they are operating equipment.
These aerosols are often of unknown concentration and toxicity. This project
will provide a critical link in the process of determining the cause(s)
of hazardous exposure within enclosed cabs on equipment such as bulldozers,
front-end loaders, grapplers, graders, haulage trucks, and tractor cabs.
Particulate filter efficiency has been tested in the laboratory. Now, aerosol
particle counters are being evaluated to determine their ability to monitor
total cab integrity and will be used in the field to identify leaks in environmental
cabs. Equipment manufacturers, equipment operators, and NIOSH researchers
will collaborate to measure the degree to which aerosols can penetrate environmental
enclosures under real-world conditions. All phases, from manufacturing and
design, audits, and routine maintenance, will be studied. Appropriate aerosol
test methodology will be incorporated into a total cab performance program.
KEYWORDS: Control technology, exposure
assessment, heavy equipment cabs, aerosol filtration, respiratory disease
RECENT CITATIONS:
Heitbrink, W.A., E.S. Moyer, P.A. Jensen, D.S. Watkins, and S.B. Martin.
(2002. In press.) Envi-ronmental agricultural tractor cab filter efficiency
and field evaluation. American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal.
RESEARCHER: Paul
Baron
AFFILIATION:
Division of Applied Research and Technology
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4278
PURPOSE: Develop and
evaluate more accurate fiber and dust samplers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Workers are exposed to dust that can include lead, chromium, and silica
at virtually every construction site. Road construction and well drilling
can create large quantities of silica-containing dust. Sanding and woodworking
produce high concentrations of wood dust. Asbestos is still being removed
from many facilities, and other fibers, such as refractory ceramic fibers,
are still being used commercially.
Improved dust samplers are needed to assess total and respirable dust exposures
for personal monitoring and dust control system evaluations. A collaboration
between researchers at NIOSH's Division of Applied Research and Technology
(DART) and the Health Effects Laboratory Division (HELD) has resulted in
a new type of fiber length classifier that helps to analyze the in vitro
toxicity of fibers as a function of fiber length. Preliminary tests of several
options for a fiber sampler specific for the thoracic portion of aerosols
have been carried out. The thoracic sampler will replace the current sampler,
which has problems with sample uniformity and losses in the inlet.
Improvements are also needed in ways to determine sampler efficiency so
that improvements can be made in determining overall sampler accuracy. Current
techniques for evaluating large particles with personal samplers are slow
and expensive. A wind tunnel was constructed that can measure airflow around
the human body with a laser Doppler velocimeter (LDV). These measurements
will be complemented with a particle-imaging velocimeter (PIV) that measures
the flow field more rapidly and efficiently. A system that can generate
a wide range of aerosol sizes has also been constructed to measure the sampling
efficiency of aerosol samplers mounted on a body. Aerosol concentrations
are measured at various locations around a manikin with either LDV or PIV
systems (which count particles) or with isokinetic samplers (which measure
particle concentrations at various distances from a body).
Velocity measurements were taken around the chest and "breathing zone" of
a life-size manikin, as well as around a simplified manikin and freestanding
samplers. The data are being examined by HELD to develop and validate computational
fluid dynamics models of airflow around the samplers on the manikin. The
combination of flow field measurements and calculations of particle concentrations
will allow less expensive, more direct, and more rapid determinations of
sampler inlet efficiency.
KEYWORDS: Aerosols,
respiratory disease, sampling methods

RESEARCHER:
Leo M. Blade
AFFILIATION:
Division of Applied Research and Technology
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4549
PURPOSE: Investigate
the availability of engineering controls for identified construction processes.
Assist equipment manufacturers in the design of engineering solutions to
reduce exposure to occupational hazards, as well as help employers implement
these designs.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Researchers will assess the efficacy of exist-ing measures to reduce occupational
health hazards associated specifically with abrasive blasting, drywall finishing,
and asphalt paving and roofing. Such measures include engineering controls
and substitute materials and processes.
- An estimated 150,000 workers are employed in abrasive blasting, where
they are exposed to a variety of airborne contaminants that may place
them at risk of pulmonary disorders and other work-related illnesses.
Existing tech-nologies and methods, such as wet blasting, high-pressure
water blasting, and the use of personal protective equipment, will be
evaluated at active operations to evaluate performance efficacy and
worker acceptance. Airborne contaminant exposure levels and environmental
emissions controls will also be evaluated. The evaluation will include
direct costs of equipment, materials, and environmental controls, and
indirect costs affecting productivity associat-ed with each control
measure evaluated. When appropriate and feasible, con-trol modifications
and optimizations may be recommended. Finally, industry and equipment
manufacturing partners receptive to assisting in the development and
implementation of the most promising exposure-control measures will
be pursued.
- Drywall finishing generates compounds that may contain crystalline
silica, and previous research has documented overexposures to total
airborne particu-lates among drywall finishers. Although this research
has identified effective dust control devices for drywall sanding, few
drywall finishers routinely use them. NIOSH has a cooperative agreement
with the United Labor Agency, Cleveland, OH to address economic and
other real or perceived barriers to existing and effective engineering
measures for dust control.
- Much of the research to date has focused on the reduction of asphalt
fumes associated with highway paving. Asphalt fumes are a known irritant
to workers' mucous membranes and skin. Several research studies have
suggested links to carcinogenic activity. OSHA recently listed asphalt
fume exposures (roofing and paving) as one of 18 OSHA priorities, and
the American Conference of Government Industrial Hygienists has proposed
a more stringent standard for evaluating exposures to asphalt fumes.
A Hazard Review document on asphalt fume exposure has been written.
KEYWORDS: Engineering
controls, abrasive blasting, drywall finishing, paving
RECENT CITATIONS:
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. 1999. Control of
drywall sanding dust exposures. NIOSH Hazard Controls HC30. DHHS (NIOSH)
Pub. 99-113.
Mead, K.R., R.L. Mickelsen, and T.E. Brumagin. 1999. Factory performance
evaluations of engineering controls for asphalt paving equipment. American
Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, v. 14, no. 8, pp. 565-573.
RESEARCHER: Joseph
Ventura
AFFILIATION: Painters
Health and Safety Fund (440) 239-4575
PURPOSE: Identify
the real and perceived obstacles to implementing engineering controls for
reducing hazardous exposures to airborne particles among drywall finishing
workers and evaluate a methodology for overcoming these barriers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Several studies have indicated that drywall finishers are exposed to high
levels of total and respirable dust. This research is designed to identify
barriers to implementing engineering controls, to train workers and contractors
in engineering controls, and to identify and promote incentives to implement
healthy work practices.
Jobs and work groups in the drywall industry using current practices and
practices will be identified, after which study participants be selected.
Next, participants will be interviewed to determine the real and perceived
barriers to the use of engineering controls. Surveys will then be developed
to determine the production costs of conventional practices. An efficacy
study will compare engineering controls and conventional technology, and
the economic costs associated with the use engineering controls will be
determined. Further research will compare costs of the two technologies
on the job.
Throughout this study, training for engineering control intervention will
be provided. This project will further knowledge and methods of protecting
workers from airborne exposures and encourage contractors and workers to
adopt healthy work practices.
KEYWORDS: Dust, economic
consequence, engineering controls

RESEARCHER:
Alan Echt
AFFILIATION:
Division of Applied Research and Technology
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4111
PURPOSE: Evaluate
the effectiveness of several engineering controls in reducing exposure to
respirable crystalline silica from selected construction tasks identified
during a larger study of silica exposures and controls.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: There are three components
to this project.
Tuck-pointing: Tuck-pointing involves the removal of old mortar with
a high-speed grinder, which creates large amounts of brick and mortar dust
containing silica. Two preliminary evaluations were conducted at construc-tion
sites and two more at Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers Union training
facilities. Next, a laboratory study was conducted at the International
Masonry Institute, Ft. Ritchie, MD, to determine the ventilation parameters
required to control the dust generated during tuck-pointing and brick cutting.
Finally, a field study was conducted to verify the effectiveness of the
laboratory findings for tuck-pointing ventilation.
Ready-mix concrete truck cleaning: Currently, workers are required
to enter the interior of a mixing drum and use a jackhammer to remove cured
concrete, generating a cloud of silica-containing dust. NIOSH researchers
developed two engineering control options for jackhammers to reduce concentrations
of airborne dust produced during this task: a local exhaust ventilation
shroud and a water spray attachment. To test the effectiveness of the controls,
a jack-hammer was retrofitted with the ventilation shroud and tested at
a ready-mix concrete plant. Local exhaust ventilation reduced worker exposure
to respir-able crystalline silica by more than 50%, and local exhaust ventilation
com-bined with general exhaust ventilation reduced exposures by more than
60%.
Concrete grinding: When construction workers use grinders to smooth
poured concrete surfaces, they risk overexposure to respirable dust and
crystalline silica. Hand-held grinders are used to finish surfaces after
forms are stripped, while walk-behind grinders are used on floors. An evaluation
of four local exhaust shrouds for use with hand-held grinders found that
all four shrouds were equally effective and that all reduced dust by at
least 90%. A field study of a vacuum cleaner and shroud system for hand-held
grinders found that it controlled exposures within the range of protection
provided by a half-mask respirator. Finally, a field study of a job-built
control for a scabbler that utilized water to suppress dust found that it
achieved an 80% reduction in exposures to respirable dust, and by inference,
resulted in a similar reduction in exposures to respirable crystalline silica.
KEYWORDS: Silica,
aerosols, power tools
RECENT CITATIONS:
Heitbrink, W.A., and D.S. Watkins. 2001. In-depth survey report: Con-trol
technology for crystalline silica exposures in construction: The effect
of exhaust flow rate upon the respirable dust emissions for tuck pointing
operations and a preliminary evaluation of a ventilated tool for brick cutting,
International Masonry Institute, Cascade, Maryland, March 20, 2000, through
November 3, 2000. EPHB Report 247-18.
Almaguer, D., S. Shulman, and A. Echt. 2001. In-depth survey report: Control
technology for ready-mix truck drum cleaning for Hilltop Basic Resources,
Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan. 14, 1999, through Feb. 12, 1999. EPHB Report 247-19.
Echt, A., and W.K. Sieber. 2001. In-depth survey report: Control of silica
exposures from hand tools in construction: Grinding concrete at Frank Messer
and Sons Construction Company, Newport, Kentucky, February 21-22 and 26
and March 2 and 6, 2001. EPHB Report 247-15c.
RESEARCHER: Noah Seixas
AFFILIATION: University
of Washington (206) 685-7189
PURPOSE: Evaluate
commercially available but untested masonry tools to determine their effectiveness
in reducing dust emissions.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Elevated occupational exposures to crystalline silica dust can result from
using concrete and stone during construction. In particular, masons and
concrete finishers can be exposed to unsafe levels of silica dust during
the operation of power grinding, drilling, and cutting tools. A series of
semi-controlled experiments will be conducted to determine the effectiveness
of water and localized ventilation control techniques in suppressing dust.
Six different classes of hand-held masonry power tools will be tested. Further
characterization of silica exposures during typical masonry activities will
be done at a variety of construction sites to evaluate how less-than- ideal
conditions affect tool performance and control dust. The identification
of effective control strategies for reducing silica dust exposures will
provide practical guidance to the masonry construction industry and reduce
the possibility of occupational lung disease related to silica exposure
in this industry.
KEYWORDS: Silica dust,
power tools, masonry

RESEARCHER: Edward
Coonly
AFFILIATION: ViTech
Systems, Inc. (716) 689-4025
PURPOSE: Develop two
electronic safety devices: (1) a moving hazard warning device to protect
construction workers from being struck by or trapped between or beneath
construction equipment and (2) an edge detector device to prevent worker
falls from roofs and open-sided floors and platforms.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: The U.S. construction
industry, with 6.0% of total employment, accounts for 8% of the total number
of injuries and illnesses and 17% of the total number of fatalities. "Struck-by
a moving object" and "caught in, under, or between-" type accidents account
for 13.6% of the total number of accidents at construction worksites and
cost $297 million annually. Falls through floor openings, shafts, decks,
and open platforms account for 6.2% of the total number of construction
accidents and cost about $227 million annually. At present, engineering
controls to prevent these accidents do not exist.
To reduce these accidents, two devices that feature the use of ultrasonic
sensors powered by small rechargeable batteries and controlled by microchips
are being developed. Each safety device will be the size of a pager and
built into the back of a toolbelt. The devices will warn a worker via an
audible and/or vibration alarm whenever he or she is too close to approaching
equipment or the edge of a roof or open-sided floor.
A prototype device for detecting floor openings and the edges of platforms
has been developed. The batteries to power the device for one full work-week
of 50 hours are still being investigated. Worker acceptability will be tested
after a final design of the device is produced. A prototype of the moving
hazard warning device, which will warn a construction worker if a heavy
equipment is approaching from behind, is currently being tested in both
the laboratory and the field. Limitations in the distance over which the
ultrasonic sensors can detect moving equipment has been a major factor impeding
the progress on the device. It may be necessary to customize the ultrasonic
sensor. However, if the sensor fails to detect an object at an adequate
distance under all weather conditions, we may evaluate the use of radio-frequency
sensors.
PATENT: A patent application
is in process.
KEYWORDS: Falls, "struck-by"
accidents, safety devices
RESEARCHER: Satish Mohan
AFFILIATION: ViTech Systems, Inc.
(716) 689-4025
PURPOSE: Develop and
field-test an electronic sensor system that can detect voltage intensity
of overhead high-voltage powerlines and their distance from mobile cranes.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
In 1981, a year for which a complete data set is available, approximately
2,300 lost workdays, 115 fatalities, and 200 permanent total disabilities
resulted when a mobile crane came into contact with a powerline. Forty-seven
workers were killed in 1991 when scaffolds composed of metal or other conductive
materials came into contact with powerlines. On average, seven workers are
electrocuted every year in aerial lifts during tree trimming. The cost of
these accidents is estimated at $259 million.
In this project, researchers will develop a sensor system that will warn
a crane operator when the crane boom gets too close to a powerline. If the
boom gets dangerously close, the system will trigger a loud alarm and a
flashing light to warn the crane operator and those working in the vicinity
of the crane. The alarm system will be designed as a number of sensors attached
to the crane boom. These sensors will be connected to each other by a powered
sensor bus and then to a microprocessor located in the operator's cabin.
A second smaller system using a similar design will be developed for conductive
scaffolds, aerial man-lifts, boom trucks, and other self-propelled machinery
that could make physical contact with a powerline.
A prototype has been developed and tested on 4-kV, three-phase powerlines.
The system measures electric fields precisely and can estimate both voltage
and the distance of powerlines from the crane. Operating Engineers Local
17 and an electric utility company are cooperating in this work. The final
version will include a video display terminal within the viewing area of
the operator that will show the crane boom and powerlines in the vicinity
of the crane.
PATENT: A patent application
is in process.
KEYWORDS: Crane safety,
crane electrocutions
RESEARCHER: Leonhard
Bernold
AFFILIATION: North
Carolina State University (919) 515-3677
PURPOSE: Evaluate
new excavation technologies that promise to reduce radically several hazards
related to backhoe excavation during construction.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: Previous
research successfully demonstrated the feasibility and applicability of
safe excavation and pipe-laying. This research "ruggedized" prototype technologies
and demonstrated each as full-scale field experiments at actual construction
sites using construction crews. From the lessons learned, new questions
and further research topics have arisen. To achieve these goals, the following
specific aims will be pursued.
- Extend the capabilities of the excavator-mounted, buried utility
detection system (EM-BUDS). Currently this device can locate metallic
pipes and powerlines; what is needed is a device that can locate plastic
and concrete pipe.
- Address questions raised as to whether the pipe manipulator (PIPEMAN)
can be used to place bedding remotely.
- Design and fabricate a smaller version of PIPEMAN (PIPEMAN, Jr.)
that can lay smaller-diameter polyvinyl and steel pipes. Investigate
issues regarding joints in these types of pipes, which have very different
requirements than do concrete pipes.
- Integrate the expanded EM-BUDS and PIPEMAN, Jr.
- Improve the human-machine interfaces of EM-BUDS, PIPEMAN, and PIPEMAN,
Jr.
- Demonstrate technologies at field sites.
KEYWORDS: Confined
space, traumatic injuries, excavation
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