|
RESEARCHER:
David Pedersen
AFFILIATION:
Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations and Field Studies
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4223
PURPOSE:
Provide external support for NIOSH's analytic epidemiology research program
concerned with energy-related health effects at DOE facilities.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
NIOSH supports applied field research to identify and investigate the relationships
between health outcomes and occupational exposure to radiation and other
hazardous agents, epidemiologic research relevant to energy-related occupational
health, and research related to assessing occupational exposures to hazardous
agents at nuclear weapons facilities and in other energy-related industries.
This program uses academic and nonprofit organizations to propose and support
research that focuses on current and former worker populations at energy-related
sites and expands the literature on such research. These extramurally generated
projects provide a point of view different from NIOSH intramural research
concepts. Unique exposures in special populations, such as job stress in
downsized workers or lung fibrosis in plutonium workers, and surveillance
methods are evaluated by academic researchers and labor, either independently
or in collaboration with NIOSH partners. Several studies specifically addressed
the occupational exposure characteristics of personnel in the construction
trade crafts, including exposure history reconstruction, participatory job
task analysis, and mechanisms for hazard exposure identification and surveillance.
Most of the study procedures include meta-analysis, combined analysis methodologies,
and combined cohort studies across sites, and provide an opportunity for
an intervention component. Results of this study should contribute significantly
to the understanding of health effects associated with low-level exposures
to ionizing radiation and other hazardous agents at DOE sites. All study
records will become part of the DOE Comprehensive Epidemiologic Data Resource.
KEYWORDS:
Epidemiology, exposure assessment, nuclear workers
RECENT CITATIONS:
Bingham, E. Work histories evaluating new participatory methods. University
of Cincinnati. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2001-133/
Barnhart, S. Comprehensive occupational health surveillance. University
of Washington. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2001-133/
Tankersley, W. Improved Systems for worker exposure surveillance. Oak Ridge
Associated Universities. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/docs/2001-133/
RESEARCHER:
Lisa Morrow
AFFILIATION:
University of Pittsburgh (412) 624-0762
PURPOSE:
Examine long-term changes in neuropsychological performance in a cohort
of workers chronically exposed to lead.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Exposures to lead remain a significant issue for occupational and environmental
health, in part because new research continues to demonstrate adverse effects
at levels formerly thought to be innocuous. Few studies up to this point
have been able to examine the effects of lead in relation to quantitative
measures of chronic occupational exposure. The study will also add to our
understanding of the effects of lead in older people, which is important
as the working population ages.
People with past and current exposure to lead are being compared to a demographically
similar unexposed control group. Between 1981 and 1984, 288 lead-exposed
workers and 182 unexposed controls were evaluated as part of an epidemiological
study of lead carried out at the University of Pittsburgh. At the time of
the initial evaluation the workers had a mean age of 35 (range 21-60). The
current tests will repeat the neuropsychological test battery, collect information
on current and past psychiatric history and current blood lead levels, and
measure lead concentration in bones using x-ray fluorescence (XRF). To date,
we have re-evaluated 117 subjects. For the current assessment, lead-exposed
subjects and unexposed controls do not differ in age, but overall education
is higher for controls. Sixty percent of the workers have not worked with
lead for over a year, while 40% are currently working or have worked with
lead within the past year.
The specific aims are to test four hypotheses:
-
That exposed subjects will have poorer neuropsychological test scores
and more psychiatric dysfunction;
-
That exposed subjects will show steeper performance declines across the
age range when compared to controls;
-
That exposure will be predictive of performance, with a dose-response
pattern; and
-
That higher bone lead concentrations will co-vary with current blood
lead levels.
KEYWORDS:
Effectiveness research, neurotoxicology, lead
RESEARCHER:
Pam Susi
AFFILIATION:
CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500; (856) 985-9300
PURPOSE:
Develop a health hazard assessment and control methodology for construction
that cultivates safety and health expertise within the construction workforce.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Construction safety and health specialists. Journeymen from several trades
have been trained to collect exposure data and assist in control technology
evaluations throughout the United States. Educa-tional programs are in place
at Marshall University with the International Union of Painters and Allied
Trades and at Drexel University with building trades workers in Philadelphia
and southern New Jersey to provide college-credit courses in occupational
safety and health for construction.
Silica surveys. Over 40 personal exposure measurements of respirable
dust and respirable quartz were collected at 13 sites from painters, bricklayers,
operating engineers, and laborers. Exposures to respirable quartz were over
500 times the NIOSH Recommended Exposure Limit (REL) for painters engaged
in abrasive blasting, over 20 times the NIOSH REL for bricklayers, and over
10 times the NIOSH REL for operators and laborers engaged in road milling
operations.
Welding fume and metal exposure hazard evaluation. Approximately
200 personal exposure measurements of fumes and various metals were collected
among welders during welding and torch-cutting. Measurements have been collected
with and without ventilation. Use of ventilation showed a statistically
significant reduction in exposure. Hexavalant chromium and other metal exposures
among construction workers are currently being evaluated based on field
surveys of welding and abrasive blasting operations and review of the literature.
Engineering and Work Practice Controls Work Group. CPWR and NIOSH co-chair
a standing work group that directs, develops, and evaluates control technologies
for construction health hazards. The group convened its tenth meeting in
March 2002. Videos graphically demonstrating the effectiveness of local
exhaust ventilation for drywall finishing dust and welding have been developed.
Low-hazard abrasive blasting methods and materials and engineering controls
for masonry work are currently being evaluated.
Other collaborators on this project include the United Association of Plumbers
and Pipefitters, the International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Crafts,
Philadelphia Apprenticeship Coordinators Association, Harvard University,
and the University of North Carolina.
KEYWORDS:
Exposure assessment, silica, metals, control technology, education and training
RECENT CITATIONS:
Susi, P., M. Goldberg, and P. Barnes. 2000. The use of a task-based exposure
assessment model for assessment of metal fume exposure. Applied Occupational
and En-vironmental Hygiene, v. 15, pp. 26- 38.
Rappaport, S.M., M. Weaver, D. Taylor, L. Kupper, and P. Susi. 1999. Application
of mixed models to assess aerosol exposures measured by construction workers
during hot processes. Annals of Occupational Hygiene, v. 43, no.
7.
Weaver, M., L. Kupper, D. Taylor, H. Kromhout, P. Susi, and S. Rappaport.
2001. Simultaneous assessment of occupational exposures from multiple worker
groups. Annals of Occupational Hygiene, v. 45, no. 7, pp. 525- 542.
Susi, P. Welding: A Control Technology. 2000. Video 1-00. Silver
Spring, MD: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training. 8 minutes.
Back
to Contents
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.
|