Asthma and your workplace

Asthma and your workplace

Work-related asthma

There are many substances in the workplace that may cause

asthma

to develop, or

trigger asthma symptoms

in someone who already has asthma. If you experience asthma symptoms at work, and these symptoms improve when you are away from work, such as during holidays or on weekends, you may have what is called work-related or occupational asthma.

What can cause asthma in the workplace?

Occupational asthma can occur in many types of workplaces, but is most commonly reported where people are working with flour or grains and isocyanates (chemicals which are found in paints as hardening agents).

Other substances may include wood dust (such as western red cedar, redwood, and oak), strong cleaning products, chemicals or animal allergens.

Occupational asthma symptoms

Occupational asthma may be indicated by symptoms that:

vary during the working week or shift

occur at night, in the morning after significant exposure, or during the working day

improve over weekends or holidays

persist even outside the workplace after prolonged exposure and when asthma becomes more severe.

Occupational asthma is generally preventable if you avoid the triggers of asthma in the workplace.

Work-aggravated asthma occurs when there is sensitisation to a substance encountered at work, which is different from occupational asthma. Work-aggravated asthma occurs when people who already have asthma are exposed to factors, such as gases or fumes, smoke, dust or cold dry air, which irritate the airways, causing asthma symptoms to occur and make a pre-existing condition worse.

Asthma and high-risk jobs

Some jobs are more likely to affect a person with asthma because of the triggers in the environment. These include:

aluminium smelter – aluminium compounds

automotive industry – chemicals

baking and pastry cooks – flour, additives, sodium metabisulphite, enzymes and fungi

car repairs and panel beating – epoxy resins and organic solvents

carpet factory workers – vegetable gums

chemists – chemicals

cleaning – enzymes

detergent manufacturing – enzymes

electronics – solder fumes, metal salts, dusts and fumes

embalmers – chemicals

entomologists – insects

farming, harvesting, process workers, fishers – grain dust, hay, animal dander and excreta, bird products, seafood and fungi

fire-fighting – smoke and combustion products

flooring and tiling – chemicals

floristry and gardening – flowers, pollen and chemicals

foam manufacturers – adhesives and chemicals

garage attendants – car exhaust fumes

hairdressing and cosmetics – dyes, perfumes, sprays and chemicals

healthcare workers including dentists – psyllium, latex, enzymes, chemicals, metals and medicines (anti-biotics, opiates)

jewellers and artists – solder

laboratory – animal dander and excreta, insects and chemicals

medical equipment – latex

metal refining – acids, chlorines, aluminium, heavy metal salts and solder

milling and grain handling – fumigants and grain dust

motor industry and welders – solder

oil refining – hydrocarbon mists

packers – dust

painting and decorating, spray painting – paint additives and solvents, and chemicals

pharmaceutical industry – vegetable gums and chemicals

photography – metals

printing – dyes and solvents

textile industry and tanners – cotton and chemicals

toy factory – latex

warehouse – enzymes

woodworking, carpentry, sawmills, arborists, sanders – wood dust

working with animals, veterinary, breeders, groomers – animal dander and animal excreta, and egg protein.

Reactive airways dysfunction syndrome (RADS)

If you have inhaled a high dose of a substance that causes damage to the airways, possibly as part of an industrial accident or spillage, you may temporarily experience breathlessness and a wheeze similar to asthma. This is called reactive airways dysfunction syndrome (RADS).

Symptoms usually occur within 24 hours of a single exposure to very high concentrations of a chemical spill, irritant gases, corrosive mists or solvent vapours. Usually, symptoms will gradually improve as your airways heal, but occasionally, workers can be left with permanent symptoms.

RADS might explain an increase in respiratory symptoms among firefighters.

Preventing exposure to triggers

For some people with asthma, ongoing exposure to

triggers

can cause continued inflammation and excess mucus production in the airways, and can make a person’s asthma worse. Ongoing exposure can lead to more severe asthma and irreversible airway damage. Where possible, workplaces should avoid using substances that can trigger asthma. This can be achieved by no longer using the substance or substituting it for one that is less hazardous to the person’s health.

Where removal of the workplace trigger is not possible, reducing exposure by using local exhaust ventilation systems or Australian Standards approved respiratory protection devices can also help exposure to triggers. The employer and employee should work together to develop strategies to reduce exposure to triggers and irritants in the workplace.

Workers should not disregard the importance of workplace asthma triggers and may need to consider alternative working arrangements if exposure to the trigger can’t be eliminated.

Using approved respiratory protection devices during fires should be considered a critical measure to reduce the impact of exposure for firefighters.

Early treatment for workplace asthma is crucial

If you did not have asthma previously, and think you have developed asthma following exposure to substances in the workplace, it is important to seek medical advice for tests and an accurate

diagnosis

.

Your doctor will confirm if you have asthma and if it’s associated with exposures at work, and identify the specific causative agent.

People with workplace asthma should absolutely avoid repeated exposure.

With your permission, your doctor could make contact with your employer to advise on protection for other workers.

Where to get help

Your

GP (doctor)

Pharmacist

Your health and safety representative at work

WorkSafe

Victoria

External Link

Tel.

1800 136 089

Asthma

Australia

External Link

Tel. 1800 ASTHMA (

1800 278 462

)

National Asthma Council

Australia

External Link

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