
Photo: Mount Sinai/CHEP/elcosh
Toronto — After conducting a silica and dust exposure assessment for six work tasks in the concrete floor trade, the Infrastructure Health and Safety Association has published a summary of its findings.
A newly released bulletin states that “respirable silica exposure over time can lead to silicosis, a serious lung disease. Silica is present in concrete dust, making it essential to minimize worker exposure to these hazards.”
IHSA assessed exposure levels during the following tasks: use of a hand grinder, chipping concrete, cutting concrete, sandblasting, shot blasting and mixing concrete.
The bulletin features a chart showing the work task and associated exposure readings during the field assessment.
Sandblasting (outside) had the highest exposure to respirable dust, at 16.9 milligrams per cubic meter. That’s more than five times the permissible exposure limit of 3 mgs per cubic meter.
Other work tasks that resulted in exposure to respirable dust above the PEL (expressed as milligrams per cubic meter):
- Chipping inside (poor ventilation) – 15.2
- Hand grinding, close – 7.5
- Quick cut saw, dry concrete cutting – 6.0
- Chipping – inside (good ventilation) – 5.4
- Hand grinding, standing – 3.8
Two other tasks were listed as “caution when using action controls”: Chipping (outside) and soff-cutting (green concrete).
Only one task in the silica or cristobalite columns was above the PEL. Hand grinding (close) had an exposure to quartz of 0.113 mgs per cubic meter. The PEL for quartz is 0.1.
IHSA recommendations to control exposure levels:
- Prioritize engineering controls and supplement with respirators for additional exposure protection.
- Work outdoors when possible. Results show better outcomes compared with performing tasks in poorly ventilated indoor work areas.
- Use vacuum attachments and regularly change filters to reduce airborne dust levels.
- Use water to suppress dust formation when cutting concrete.
- Have workers wear appropriate respiratory protection when visible dust is present.
“A well-fitted respirator can reduce dust and silica exposure by a factor of 10,” the bulletin states. “Without a respirator, workers performing sandblasting, chipping, cutting concrete and hand grinding would exceed their time-weighted average. A NIOSH-approved N95 mask must be worn when cutting, grinding or modifying dry-hardened concrete.”
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Original article published by Safety+Health an NSC publication