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Chapter 1 Appendix I
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CONTROLLING CHEMICAL EXPOSURES
The Lab Standard requires the employer to determine
and implement control measures to reduce employee exposure to hazardous
chemicals; and particular attention must be given to the selection of control
measures for chemicals that are known to be extremely hazardous. There are
three major routes of entry for a chemical to enter the body: inhalation,
absorption, and ingestion. Three types of controls for prevention of these
various routes of entry include engineering controls, personal protective
equipment and administrative controls. Each route of entry a chemical can
take to enter the body can be controlled in a number of ways, as explained
below.
Inhalation Hazards
Inhalation of chemicals is the most common route of entry a chemical
can take to enter the body. To avoid inhalation exposures, hazard reduction
methods such as substituting a less volatile or a less toxic chemical
or substituting a liquid or solid chemical for a gaseous one are the best
means of control. If substitution is not practical, engineering controls
such as ventilation should be used to lessen the chance of exposure. The
use of well-functioning local exhaust ventilation such as fume hoods,
biological safety cabinets, vented glove boxes and other local exhaust
systems is often required to minimize exposure to hazardous chemicals.
Dilution ventilation may be used to reduce exposure to nonhazardous nuisance
odors. For extremely toxic chemicals such as those classified as poison
gases by State or Federal agencies (e.g., arsine, phosgene) the use of
closed systems, vented gas cabinets, fail-safe scrubbing, detection or
other stricter controls may be required.
If both substitution and engineering controls are unavailable, the
use of personal protective equipment may be required to reduce inhalation
exposures. Respiratory protection from dust masks to self-contained breathing
apparatus may be utilized to this end. If laboratory employees wear
respirators,
requirements of the OSHA Respirator Standard (1910.134) must be met and
a written respirator program must be implemented. A respiratory program
can be developed at http://ehs.uky.edu/ohs/respgate.html.
This Standard requires training on the proper use of respirators; medical
surveillance to ensure the user is capable of wearing a respirator, and
fit testing to ensure that the respirator fits properly. A lab worker
or his/her supervisor should contact the Occupational Health and Safety
Department (257-3827) in the event that respiratory protection is to
be
utilized to control exposures to hazardous chemicals.
In addition the following principles should be utilized to reduce the
risk of exposure to hazardous chemicals:
Skin/Eye Contact Hazards
To reduce the risk of a chemical entering the body via skin and eye
contact, engineering controls include substitution and appropriate ventilation
as described above in Inhalation Hazards. The more obvious means of preventing
skin and eye contact is the wearing of personal protective equipment such
as eye protection, face shields, gloves, appropriate shoes, lab aprons,
lab coats, and other protective equipment as appropriate to the hazard.
Since the chemical resistivity of the different types of protective equipment
varies significantly, the lab supervisor should consult Appendix VI or
other references to ascertain that the protective equipment material is
resistant to the chemical being protected against. Safety showers/eye
wash equipment is required where corrosive chemicals are used. Such equipment
should be prominently labeled and not obstructed.
Ingestion Hazards
Ingestion of chemicals is the least common route of entry into the body.
However a Laboratory Worker can easily ingest chemicals into the body
via contaminated hands if they are not washed prior to eating, smoking
or sticking part of the hand or a writing tool that has been in contaminated
hands into the mouth. Some controls for preventing this route of exposure
include engineering controls like isolating the hazardous substance so
minimal contact is required (e.g., use glove box). Also, administrative
controls such as forbidding mouth pipetting, encouraging good personal
hygiene and designating a well-marked nonchemical area where eating, drinking
and the application of cosmetics is permitted. And finally personal protective
equipment such as the wearing of gloves can reduce this type of exposure.
Exposure Assessment
At the request of faculty, staff or students, exposure evaluations may
be conducted by Occupational Health for any suspected overexposure to
substances regulated by OSHA. Records of exposure evaluations will be
kept in the Occupational Health and Safety Department and provided to
the department and affected employees and any other appropriate authorities
at the University. The following list of chemicals require initial monitoring
to determine exposures:
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Modified on 09-13-2002 Send Comments to J. King |