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Introduction to Industrial Hygiene

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Title: Introduction to Industrial Hygiene


1
Introduction to Industrial Hygiene
  • MODULE 12

2
What is Industrial Hygiene?
  • Industrial hygiene is the science of
    anticipating, recognizing, evaluating, and
    controlling workplace conditions that may cause
    workers' injury or illness.
  • Key factors
  • Employee exposure to hazards
  • Control for hazards to protect workers

3
Steps to Protect Employees
  • Anticipate potential hazards
  • Recognize potential hazards
  • Evaluate exposure and risk
  • Control exposure and risk
  • (Not just for health hazards)

4
Hierarchy of Controls
  • Engineering controls Remove hazard
  • Process change, Chemical substitution
  • Ventilation, Shielding, Guarding
  • Requires little or no employee action
  • Administrative controls Manage exposure
  • Worker rotation, Procedures, Training
  • Trench shoring, Controlled access areas
  • Requires employee action

5
Hierarchy of Controls
  • Personal protective equipment (PPE)
  • Respirators, Gloves, Boots, Clothing
  • Fall protection equipment, Hard hats
  • Requires individual employee action
  • Last line of defense, behind engineering and
    administrative controls
  • Addressed in 29 CFR 1910 Subpart I

6
Chemical exposures in oil and gas operations
  • What chemicals are used in oil and gas
    operations?
  • How can employees be exposed?
  • What toxic effects do these chemicals have?
  • How can employees be protected from these effects?

7
Toxic and Hazardous Substances
  • 29 CFR Subpart Z

8
29 CFR Subpart Z
  • 1910.1000 Air Contaminants
  • Includes Z tables worker exposure limits for
    specific listed substances
  • Employee exposure cannot exceed limits
  • Tables Z-1, Z-2, Z-3 each have their own
    requirements
  • PEL Permissible Exposure Limit

9
29 CFR Subpart Z
  • 1910.1001-1096
  • Specific regulations for individual substances
    including
  • asbestos (1910.1001)
  • lead (1910.1025)
  • bloodborne pathogens (1910.1030), and others
  • 1910.1200 Hazard Communication

10
1910.1000(a) - Table Z-1
  • Derived from 1968 ACGIH TLVs
  • American Conference of Governmental Industrial
    Hygienists
  • Threshold Limit Values
  • Levels thought to cause no significant adverse
    health effects in the majority of the community

CHECK
11
1910.1000(a) - Table Z-1
  • Lists common workplace chemicals
  • Two types of limits
  • 8-hour Time Weighted Average (TWA) or
  • Ceiling (C) limits
  • Employee exposure shall at no time exceed a
    ceiling (C) exposure limit

12
1910.1000(a) - Table Z-1
  • 8-hour Time Weighted Averages (TWA)
  • Employee exposure shall not exceed 8-hour TWA in
    any 8-hour work shift of a 40-hour work week
  • Calculations illustrated in (d)
  • Units
  • Parts per million (ppm)
  • Milligrams per cubic meter (mg/m3)

13
Subtitles Transitions
Table Z-1 Examples
  • FOR EXAMPLE

14
1910.1000(b) - Table Z-2
  • Adopted from ANSI standards (American National
    Standards Institute)
  • Expanded standards developed for some of the
    substances found in Z-2, including
  • Benzene 1910.1028
  • Cadmium 1910.1027
  • Formaldehyde 1910.1048
  • Methylene chloride 1910.1052

15
1910.1000(b) - Table Z-2
  • Table Z-2 expresses exposure limits as
  • 8-hour TWA
  • Ceiling
  • Peak
  • If a substance has both ceiling and peak limits
    peak level never to be exceeded
  • Exposure levels over the ceiling but under the
    peak must comply with margin notes in table
  • TWA must still not be exceeded

16
1910.1000(b) - Table Z-2 Examples
17
1910.1000(c) - Table Z-3
  • 8-hour TWA limits for forms of silica
  • Adopted from ACGIH TLVs
  • SiO2 basic component of sand, granite
  • Quartz 2nd most common mineral
  • Quartz sand (crystalline silica) used to fracture
    rock formations in wells
  • Silica in barite, lignite, and bentonite mud
    additives

18
Health Effects of Silica
  • Silicosis
  • Irreversible but preventable
  • Most commonly associated with silica dust
  • Other possible effects
  • Lung cancer
  • Some auto-immune diseases

(Scanning electron micrograph by William Jones,
Ph.D., compliments of OSHA)
19
1910.1000(c) - Table Z-3
20
1910.1000(d) Computation formulae
  • Time Weighted Average
  • E (C1?T1 C2?T2 )/total time
  • Total time used 8 hours
  • Example in 1910.1000(d)(1)(ii)
  • What about different work schedules?
  • Varies by chemical
  • Most chemicals Worst 8 hours of shift
  • Lead adjusted by hours worked
  • Interpretation Foulke letter, 1997

21
1910.1000(d) Computation formulae
  • Exposure to Chemical Mixtures
  • Em (C1/L1) (C2/L2) (Cn/Ln)
  • If Em gt 1, employee is overexposed
  • Assumptions
  • Chemicals effects are additive
  • Dose is proportional to C ? T

22
1910.1000(e) To achieve compliance
  • Administrative or engineering controls first
    wherever feasible
  • When those are not feasible for full compliance
    protective equipment or other protective measures
  • Equipment or technical measures must be approved
    by competent industrial hygienist or qualified
    person
  • Respirators 1910.134

23
Chemical-Specific Standards
  • 1910.1001 Asbestos
  • 1910.1018 Inorganic Arsenic
  • 1910.1025 Lead
  • 1910.1026 Chromium (VI) (revised 2006)
  • 1910.1027 Cadmium
  • 1910.1028 Benzene
  • Oil and gas drilling, production, servicing
    exempt
  • 1910.1029 Formaldehyde

24
1910.1020 Access to employee exposure and medical
records
  • Employees, representatives, and OSHA have right
    of access
  • Preserved for 30 years, with exceptions
  • Employee consent for medical records
  • OSHA access order posted if identifiable
  • Trade secrets
  • Employee information

25
1910.1030 Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Occupational exposure
  • Reasonably anticipated skin, eye, mucous
    membrane, or parenteral contact
  • With blood or other potentially infectious
    materials (OPIM) e.g. certain body fluids, tissues

26
1910.1096 Ionizing radiation
  • OSHA standards cover NORM and TENORM
  • Exposures must be kept within limits even if
    sources are natural

27
1910.1201 Retention of DOT markings, placards and
labels
  • Retain markings on packages received until clean
    enough to remove hazard
  • Freight container or vehicle retains placards
    until materials removed enough
  • Readily visible
  • Non-bulk packages not to be reshipped Hazard
    Communication labels OK

28
1910.1450 Hazardous chemicals in laboratories
  • For laboratory use only
  • Supersedes other standards in Subpart Z except
  • PELs
  • Prohibition of eye and skin contact
  • Exposure monitoring and medical surveillance for
    those over action levels

29
Protective Measures
  • Other Standards and

30
General Duty Clause
  • Recognized hazards may be cited
  • If there is no PEL
  • Consensus or proprietary standards
  • ANSI, ACGIH, AIHA
  • Industry Best Practices
  • Manufacturer Recommendations (MSDS)

31
Biological Hazards
  • Potentially infectious material exposure
  • Contagious diseases e.g. influenza
  • Vector-borne diseases e.g. Malaria, Lyme disease
  • Fungi e.g. mold, spores
  • Toxins e.g. endotoxin
  • Allergens / sensitizers e.g. pollen, red cedar

32
Physical and Radiological Hazards
  • Heat or cold (General Duty Clause)
  • Vibration (General Duty Clause)
  • Noise (1910 Subpart G)
  • Non-ionizing radiation (electromagnetic, light)
    (1910 Subpart G)
  • Ionizing radiation

33
Other Standards
  • 29 CFR 1926 Subpart D Occupational Health and
    Environmental Controls
  • Construction operations only
  • API RP 54
  • Noise rules allow for 12 hour shifts
  • Handling drilling fluid chemicals and additives

34
Protective Measures
  • How are exposures to health hazards evaluated on
    your site?
  • How are they controlled?
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