Asthma Risk In British Bakeries, UK
Main Category: Respiratory / AsthmaArticle Date: 07 May 2009 - 5:00 PDT
Thousands of British bakers could be at risk of developing a debilitating respiratory condition unless they take sensible precautions, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has warned.
Bakers are about 80 times more likely to develop occupational asthma than the average British worker.
Workers exposed to flour and other bakery dusts can develop asthma unless sensible precautions are taken. Shortness of breath, wheezing and painful coughing are just some of the symptoms that occupational asthma suffers may have to deal with every day.
To mark World Asthma Day - Tuesday 5 May - HSE is sending bakeries copies of a pocket card containing advice for workers on what they can do themselves to protect their health. The card gives examples of good working practices.
HSE estimates that some 27,000 of the 100,000 workers in the British baking industry will regularly be working with flour as an ingredient.
Steve Coldrick, the Director of Disease Reduction at HSE, said:
"Flour might seem harmless compared with chemicals used in other industries, but the truth is that unless it is handled correctly it can lead to serious health problems. In extreme cases sufferers of occupational asthma may not be able to return to work.
"By using the correct equipment and making simple changes to working procedures this condition is entirely preventable."
British bakers are one of the groups most at risk of developing occupational asthma, with around 100 new cases being diagnosed each year.
Exposure to flour and bakery dust should be kept to a minimum and ensuring good house keeping will help keep this in check, HSE advises. Other key recommendations include:
- Handle flour and powdered products carefully. Dropping flour from a height or throwing with force will create dust clouds.
- Use sprinklers to spread dusting flour rather than hand throwing.
- Clean up spillages immediately. Do not use airlines or brushes to dry sweep dust. Use high efficiency industrial vacuum cleaners for general cleaning. Shovel up large amounts gently.
- Take care to avoid raising dust while loading ingredients into mixers.
- Start up mixers on slow speed until wet and dry ingredients are combined.
Notes
- HSE is the national regulator for health and safety in the workplace in Great Britain. Its job is to protect people against risks to health or safety and prevent death, injury and ill health in British workplaces. It does this through research, information and advice, promoting training, new or revised regulations and codes of practice, inspection, investigation and enforcement.
- World Asthma Day is an annual event that aims to improve asthma awareness and care throughout the world.
- The Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations 2002 (as amended) requires employers to either prevent or, where this is not reasonably practicable, control exposures to hazardous substances at work. Employers must assess the risk of exposure (exposure means taking in chemicals by breathing in, by skin contact or by swallowing) and introduce effective control measures to protect employees' health. Employers should also carry out regular health surveillance which means regularly looking for early signs of work related ill health and putting procedures in place to achieve this.
- HSE statistics on occupational asthma are based on estimated number of cases reported by chest and occupational physicians to SWORD/OPRA and estimated rates per 100,000 workers per year, by occupation between 2005-2007. The statistics are available at: http://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/causdis/asthma.htm
- To view the Bakers pocket card visit: http://www.hse.gov.uk/asthma/bakers.htm
Source
HSE
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Alternative Cause For Asthma In Bakery Workers
posted by Richard Bruce on 14 May 2009 at 6:05 amRe Asthma in UK bakery workers.
This problem was raised with me by doctors in 1992. It was said that my poisoning by the organophosphate chemicals used to control grain store insects at last gave a clue as to why so many bakery and flour mill workers were suffering from respiratory problems.
Sadly the drug treatments for asthma are contraindicated in OP poisoning and the British government's Health and Safety Executive failed to properly investigate the issues involved.
In my considered opinion such chemicals should NEVER ever have been approved for admixture with grains for human consumption.
As cumulative DNA, RNA and mitochondria damaging neurotoxic poisons they are simply too dangerous at any level.
Richard Bruce. (UK)
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