* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Sept 2012 Safety Awareness WITH NOTES
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Reducing Risks in the Field Safety Awareness for Environmental Health Professionals CIT September 2012 Nancy Deal Non-point Source Pollution Program Coordinator (EPA319) Onsite Water Protection Branch 919-710-4188 [email protected] 1 Mission Statement To safeguard life, promote human health and protect the environment through the practice of modern environmental health science, the use of technology, rules, public education and above all, dedication to the public trust. 2 Overview General safety for all disciplines Authorization-specific safety Pathogens 3 Questions and comments… …are welcome 4 Safety Safety is a culture: It starts at the top and filters down. – The boss must buy into the concept – Each worker must also take responsibility Safety When safety is the most important goal on the job, everyone gets to come back to work the next day. Safety An accident is an unforeseen incident that occurs while following established protocol instead of an incident resulting from an unsafe condition. You must plan to be safe! Why do accidents happen? Eyes not on Path – Slips, trips and falls Eyes not on Task – Impact injuries Line of Fire – Exposure to liquids by “splash back” Rushing – Slow and steady is better So… Don’t get in a hurry Pay attention 9 First aid and emergency response Emergency phone numbers Cell phones are great, but – Got a signal? Where is the nearest help? – Know how to get there? First aid and emergency response Keep a well-stocked first aid kit handy Know your co-workers or employees’ health issues – Diabetes – Anaphylaxis – Heart conditions First aid and emergency response The first 15 minutes is critical – Precious time is lost if you cannot make a decision to act Get safety training, including CPR! – Your health department – Red Cross – Extension – Department of Labor – OSHA On-site safety equipment First aid kits – In the truck – On the wall 13 On-site safety equipment AEDs 14 On-site safety equipment Fire extinguishers are specific to the source of combustion A B C D K – Class A: ordinary combustibles, many plastics – Class B: flammable liquids, grease and oil – Class C: wiring, other electrical sources – Class D: Chemical fires – Class K: Cooking oils (commercial settings) Use appropriate equipment! 16 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) What to wear and when to wear it – Steel-toed shoes 17 Personal protective equipment: Gloves Latex for potential contact with – Effluent – Bodily fluids – Other unpleasantries Gauntleted overgloves – Sewage applications Personal protective equipment: Eye Protection Safety glasses Face shields as appropriate Personal protective equipment: Hearing protection Around heavy equipment Industrial settings Hearing protection: “4 C’s” Clean hands – Before inserting to avoid infection Consistent use – When noise levels exceed 85 db (A) Correct insertion – NIOSH recommendation The Roll, Pull, Hold method Comfortable fit – Or they will not be worn 21 Personal protective equipment: Hard hats and high-vis vests Required by OSHA if loads will be lifted overhead Personal protective equipment: Inhalation protection For hazardous atmospheres Should be precisely fit 23 Personal protective equipment Wooded sites – Long sleeved jackets – Snake boots – Chaps Messy sites – Coveralls – Tyvek® suits Personal protective equipment What must the employer provide for you? – Generally, anything that is not specific to the user Boots, prescription safety glasses would be your responsibility Check your employer’s policies Personal protection: hygiene Hand-washing - soap or waterless hand sanitizers – After toilet use – Before breaks and lunch Keep hands and fingers away from eyes, ears, nose, and mouth. Wear rubber gloves that are “fit for use.” Personal protection: hygiene Clothing may be contaminated – Do not store personal clothes with work clothes. – Wash work clothes separately. Conclusion – and point of beginning… To STAY SAFE: Each person is responsible for his or her own safety and thus the safety of those around them Know how to be safe Know how to respond to an emergency Authorization-specific safety Water wells Wastewater Food/Lodging/Institutional Pools Tattoo parlors Child Health Protection 29 EH DISCIPLINE Hazard F/L/I Pools Tattoo Parlors Wells Lightning x x x x x x Rain x x x x x x Excessive heat x x x x x x Excessive cold x x x x x x x x Excessive Noise Wastewater Child Health Prot Electrical x x x x x x Chemical x x x x x x Bugs x x x x x x x x Snakes x Pathogens x x x x x x Slips, trips and falls x x x x x x Human threats x x x x x x Burns x x x Confined Space x 30 Water wells and Onsite 31 Safety concerns: Water Wells and Onsite Wastewater Programs Weather – Lightning – Excessive heat and cold – Excessively wet or dry soils Site hazards – Uneven topography – Equipment Excessive noise 32 Noise • Noise levels on a typical water well worksite. • Noise levels above 90dB(A) within 6 meters of the rig, particularly near the compressor. • Wear hearing protection • Avoid standing in these areas if not required to conduct a work task. 33 General site issues Electronic devices are a distraction – Cell phones Concentrate on the job – Personal music devices Are NOT designed for hearing protection “Biological” hazards 35 Snakes: whether venomous or not… Surprise! 36 Creepy crawlers – and fliers Ticks – Wear white – Tuck pants in shoes – Use DEET – Keep duct tape handy Bees, wasps and hornets – Look for their nests – Carry your EPI pen if you are allergic – Benadryl is a decent alternative 37 Black Widows ALWAYS present in valve boxes, tank risers, well houses, etc. Vegetation “Widow makers” Briars, etc. Walking too closely behind the person in front of you - branches! Vegetation 40 Newly-cleared land What are the hazards? – Fire ant nests – Yellow jackets – Stump holes – Carrying equipment 41 Aggressive domestic animals Aggressive livestock Watch out if you are in a pasture – Goats and bulls can make life interesting 43 Angry owners and tenants 44 Electric fences Do you believe the person when they tell you it is OFF? How do you check it? 45 Safety concerns (cont.): Water Wells and Onsite Wastewater Programs Waterborne pathogens – We’ll get your attention on this later… 46 Safety concerns (cont.): Water Wells and Onsite Wastewater Programs Ergonomics – Road warriors – Extensive deskwork – Lifting 47 Personal protection: ergonomics Lifting – Use tools – Get help “Buddy system” – Legs, not back Good footing Close to load Back straight Incorrect! Better, Much Better! Dum.. Dee ..Dum Two working together is always better than one! HEY, BUDDY! A LITTLE HELP WOULD BE NICE!!! Equipment or component hazards Disinfection components – Chlorine and UV Electrical systems for components 52 Before you probe or dig… Margin of error Homeowner installed utilities Is it a straight line? Where are shut-off valves for gas and water lines? Electrical hazards Proper training and/or licensure to perform repairs to electrical systems Lock-out/tag-out procedures – All workers should be familiar with these – Get training! Electrical hazards: basics Be aware of the potential hazard at all times. Do not use metal ladders. Never override any electrical safety device. Check extension cords for abrasion and breaks as well as for missing grounding prongs Electrical hazards: basics Use only grounded or insulated (UL approved) electrical equipment. Energize AC-powered equipment through a connection with a ground fault circuit interrupter (GFCI). Excavation and trench safety measures For excavations > 4 feet deep that workers will enter While excavation is open and while workers might be in it, proper safety precautions must be observed There must be a ‘competent person’ on the site Competent person By way of training and/or experience, is… – Knowledgeable of applicable standards, – Capable of identifying commonly foreseeable workplace hazards, – Designated by the employer, and – Has authority to take appropriate actions. Can even shut down the job if conditions are unsafe. Requires special training. Competent person Excavation and trench safety Competent person Soil classification Protective measures and equipment Access and egress Stability of nearby structures Water accumulation Clear line of sight Spoil pile Re-inspection Consider: Most trench fatalities occur in trenches 5 to 15 feet deep One cubic yd of soil = about 3,000 pounds Confined space What is it? – Limited ingress and egress – Not designed for continuous human occupancy http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/confinedspaces/index.html 62 Confined Space New Installations – Any tank is a confined space Repairs, systems in use. – Lack of oxygen – Hydrogen sulfide gas, methane – Respiratory stress or arrest. – First aid To safely and legally enter a tank, one must have proper training and equipment This is an unsafe practice. Your head, body, etc. should never be in a confined space. Hazardous atmospheres Where a hazardous atmosphere exists or could reasonably be expected to exist: Atmospheres shall be tested before employees enter excavations greater than 4 feet in depth If atmospheres contain less than 19.5% oxygen – Provide ventilation/respiratory protection Hazardous atmospheres Where might there be one? Landfill or dumping area. Chemical or hazardous waste recycling or collection, storage center Water/wastewater treatment sites Inside any tank – new or used Hazardous conditions can develop quickly Heavier-than-air gases can render a safe site unsafe quickly – Equipment exhaust – Carbon dioxide – Propane – Etc. Hazardous atmospheres Emergency rescue equipment on site if hazardous atmospheres could exist: – Breathing apparatus – A safety harness and line – A basket stretcher Food, Lodging and Institutional Inspections 70 Safety concerns: Food, Lodging and Institutional Program All of the above, plus… Slips, trips and falls Burns 71 Safety concerns (cont.): Food, Lodging and Institutional Program Equipment – Do not break it down Recalled food – Safe handling instructions 72 Inside the facility Where is the First Aid Kit? How about the fire extinguisher? Do you know how to get out? 73 Safety concerns (cont.): Food, Lodging and Institutional Program Wash/sanitize hands! – Regularly – Risk of dermatitis 74 Institutional issues Isolation areas – Watch for signage Soiled linens and furniture – Where are your gloves??? 75 Safety concerns: Child Environmental Health Branch Contaminated surfaces – inside and out! – Don’t take it home to your family! 76 Safety concerns: Pools Weather Slips, trips and falls in wet areas Spiders and snakes – Storage areas – Skimmer covers 77 Safety concerns: Pools Chemicals – Mixing two types of chlorine tablets can be explosive! Trichloroisocyanuric acid for pools Calcium hypochlorite for water and wastewater – Storage areas Leaking containers – Equipment Electrical – Proper pump ground – a REAL hazard in these wet areas 78 Safety concerns: Pools Can you swim??? 79 Safety concerns: Tattoo Parlors Equipment – Needles, etc. Contaminated inks Chemicals – Disinfection chemicals – Equipment Clientele??? 80 Safety concerns: All disciplines Methamphetamine labs – Often discovered through Septic tank investigations Lead investigations Complaint investigations – Trash accumulation – Odors – Excessive traffic – Typically rental properties but not always! Hotel-based enterprises 81 Methamphetamine labs Associated dangers – Firearms – Booby traps – Vicious dogs – Volatiles used in ‘cooking’ process are flammable – Improperly stored or used chemicals can explode 82 Methamphetamine labs If you suspect you have found one GET OUT and call the law 83 Pathogen Hazards 84 Pathogens Infectious agents that can cause disease Contact with such agents is to be expected in our line of work – A fundamental part of protecting public and environmental health 85 “Knowledge is the only thing you can give away and still keep” Scott Hutchinson “Whoever said that never heard of infectious disease” J. Hoch 86 Good Bugs : Water Microbiology Many are part of the natural soil/water ecology and crucial to biogeochemical cycles 87 Waterborne diseases Results from contact with pathogencontaminated water Annual occurrence of diarrheal disease – 4.1% of daily global disease – 1.8 to 5 million people per year Most concentrated in children 88 Categories of Pathogens Bacteria Viruses Fungi Parasites Protozoa Pathogen group: Viruses Very small microbe – 20 -100 nanometers Dependent upon a host cell to replicate Resistant stages Persist from months to years bacteriophages (indicators ) from Cells Alive poliovirus from Big Virology Web 90 Virus Enteroviruses Reovirus Coxackie A, B Hepatitis A Adenovirus Rotavirus Parvovirus Norwalk virus and Norovirus Astrovirus Cacivirus Coronovirus Associated disease Gastroenteritis Meningitis Respiratory infections Respiratory infections Meningitis Infectious hepatitis Respriatory disease Eye infections Gastroenteritis Gastroenteritis Gastroenteritis Gastroenteritis Gastroenteritis Gastroenteritis 91 Pathogen Group: Bacteria Primitive organism 1-3 micrometers Can reproduce in soil and wastewater Some form spores Persist from days to weeks fecal bacteria on Millipore filter Kunkel : Colorized SEM 92 Bacterium Associated disease Shigella Shigellosis (dysentary) Salmonella typhi and paratyphi Typhoid fever Salmonella (>1,000 serotypes) Salmonellosis Vibrio cholerae Cholera Escherichia coli Gastroenteritis Yersinia enterocolitica Yersiniosis/Gastroenteritis Leptospira spp. Leptospirosis Campylobacter jejuni Gastroenteritis Clostridium perfringens Gastroenteritis 93 Pathogen Group: Fungi Micrometers to millimeters in size Live on decaying matter Can form spores Airborne (aerosols) or waterborne Aspergillus cosmic light web Candida 10 micrometers av Www.meddean.luc.edu 94 Fungi Associated disease Aspergillus fumigatus Respiratory infections Candida albicans Skin and membrane infections 95 Pathogen Group: Helminths Roundworms Egg: 35 to 60 micrometers Adult ½” to 16” Eggs are resistant stage Persist from months to 7 years Tapeworms Egg: 35 to 45 micrometers Adult: inches to feet (!) Eggs are resistant stage Persist from months to years anterior end “holdfast” Helminth Associated disease Effect Ascaris lubricoides (Ascarid) Ascariasis Rob nutrition, Intestinal blockage, Mortality Ancylostoma duodenale (hookworm) Hookworm Anemia, hemorrhage intestines Necator americanus (hookworm) Necatoriasis Anemia, hemorrhage intestines Trichuris trichiuia (whipworm) Trichuriasis Rob nutrition Toxocara (roundworm) Toxocariasis Rob nutrition Taenia saginata (tapeworm) Taeniasis Rob nutrition Taenia soleum (tapeworm) Taeniasis Rob nutrition Vampyrolepis (tapeworm) Worm Infection Seizures (Brain) Hymenolepis nana and H. diminuta (tapeworm) Worm Infection Seizures (Brain) 97 Pathogen group: Protozoa Single celled organism 10 to 100’s of micrometers Reproduce via host organism Cryptosporidium Can form cysts Persist up to 23 months oocyst (5-7microns) Giardia (cysts:10-14 micrometers) 98 Protozoan Balantidium coli Associated disease Dysentary Gastrointestinal ulcers Cryptosporidium parvum Diarrhea/nausea/fever Entamoeba histolytica Amoebic dysentary Giardia lamblia Giardiasis (diarrhea) 99 Special focus on Crypto Extremely persistent – nearly 2 years Resistant to disinfection Short Life Cycle: <1 day life cycle within one host Many (fecal – oral) routes of infection – – – – – – – Day care (diaper changing rules) Family Drinking water Contact with infected animals Contaminated food (e.g. Cider, lettuce, chicken salad) Contaminated soils (risk assessment USGS) Recreational water (Pools, fountains, water slides…) 100 Crypto Largest waterborne illness outbreak – Wisconsin in 1993 – Flood-contaminated drinking water Toll – 400,000 infected – 4,000 people (1%) hospitalized – 104 died 101 Crypto Host list is growing – Humans, cattle, swine, geese, oysters High mortality especially if immunocompromised No effective cure 102 Pathogens in Wastewater Any pathogen in fecal material can be present in wastewater! Estimated viruses concentrations in septic tanks – Range from 107 to 1010 virus particles per liter of wastewater if residents are ill Canter and Knox (1985) and Charles et al. (2003) Wastewater pathogens Septic tank provides limited pathogen inactivation Effluent – Fecal Coliform counts 5 X 10 6/liter – Bacteria can reproduce here – Some viruses not significantly inactivated Sludge – Protozoan/ worm eggs attached to floc 104 Limited documentation of health effects from onsite systems TYPICALLY, there is something wrong if exposure occurs – Surfacing effluent – Inadequate separation – Improper installation and leaking components 105 Improperly managed wastewater treatment systems May contaminate – Drinking Water – Recreational Water – Irrigation Water – Food – Land – Environmental Surfaces – Air (as aerosols) Physical Factors affecting persistence of pathogens in soils – – – – Temperature Water holding capacity Light Soil Texture Chemical – pH – Cations – Organic matter Biological – antagonism – predation Bitton 1999 (Bitton and Gerba 1984) Pathogen persistence in biological aerosols Travel – Initial shock and desiccation – Slow decline thereafter Specific characteristics • Viruses – enteroviruses hardier than bacteria or coliphages • Bacteria - encapsulated survive better than nonencapsulated • Fungal - can travel great distances (Aspergillus) (Bitton, 1999)108 Environmental survival factors on surfaces Attachment of viruses and bacteria Moisture Temperature Presence of organic matter food source Routes of transmission Fecal/oral transmission Hand to mouth Ingestion in food and water Inhale and swallow Fomites - e.g., Coated on solid objects Contact transmission through Cracks and cuts Mucous membranes Skin Vector transmission via Filth flies and beetles Two- and four-legged creatures Vector transmission relevance to exposed sewage Documented occurrence of fecal pathogen transport on houseflies & “filth flies” (nonbiting flies) Viruses polio (1943) Bacteria Vibrio cholerae(1983) Shigella (1983) E. coli 157(2000) Antibiotic resistant - Salmonella (2002) Protozoa Worms Cryptosporidium (1997 .2000. 2001. 2002 NC) Hookworm larvae (1999) Note: Found on and/or in flies 111 Occurrence of wastewaterrelated illness Pathogen must be present in the population to be present in the wastewater It must survive the treatment process and persist in the environment In a susceptible host population Exposure at the infectious dose range Infectious dose range Viruses Bacteria Protozoa Helminths 10-100s particles Shigella 10 to 100 cells Cholera 1,000 to 10,000,000 cells Campylobacter 100 to 1,000,000 cells Cryptosporidium 1 to 10 oocysts Giardia 10 to 100 cysts roundworms 1 to 10 eggs Tapeworms 1 to 800 eggs Occupational health issues Inexperienced people working in sewagerelated jobs 2-4 times higher rate of gastrointestinal illnesses Higher viral antibody titers Occupational health issues In general, WWTP workers Viral, bacterial, and chronic helminth infestations Well-documented risk for Hepatitis A & Leptospirosis Inconsistent results for parasites Increase in nonspecific illnesses – nausea, fatigue, headaches…. More dermatological complaints Respiratory – allergens – biosolids – insects Urine mutagens higher in ST workers Protect yourself, your co-workers and your family – Vaccinations – No regulations but probably LHD requirements – At a minimum, Tetanus – Probably Hepatitis – Do Not Wear contaminated clothing home if possible – If you do, wash it separately Now that we have your attention… Let’s wrap it up! Safety as a State of Mind There is no substitute for common sense. Be aware of potential hazards Stay alert Be prepared Have and use proper equipment Practice good safety habits Get good information and training 119 Safety resources NC Safety Handbook OSHA CDC 120 Staying safe: SIPDE Scan Identify Predict Decide Execute Safety FIRST, never last. Have a future, not a past. Questions?