12 PUBH 5138 Health Effects of Physical Agents
Helen Mersereau
Recommended Readings:
- OHS Body of Knowledge (Australia)
- Physical Agents (CCOHS)
- Physical Agents and Occupational Disease Compensation: Noise, Vibration, Radiation, and Other Physical Agents
Section 1: Hearing Impairment Caused by Noise
- Noise and your health (Government of Canada)
- The Effects of Noise on Health – Noise pollution is more than a nuisance. It’s a health risk (Harvard Medicine)
- Guidance for Evaluating Human Health Impacts in Environmental Assessment: NOISE (PDF) (Health Canada)
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Exposure and Limit
- ACGIH, Occupational Noise Exposure (OSHA)
- Threshold Limit Values (TLVs): 85 dBA Permissible Exposure Limit with a 3 dBA exchange rate.
- Noise & Hearing Loss Prevention (NIOSH)
- NIOSH Recommended Exposure Limit (REL) : 85 dBA, as an 8-hour time-weighted average (85 dBA as an 8-hr TWA) using a 3-dB exchange rate.
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Control
Section 2: Diseases Caused by Vibration
It produce disorders of muscles, tendons, bones, joints, peripheral blood vessels or peripheral nerves.
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Vibration Syndrome
- Vibration Syndrome (CDC)
- Vibration – Health Effects (CCOHS)
- Raynaud’s phenomenon
- Raynaud’s Phenomenon (CCOHS)
- What is Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- What are the signs and symptoms of Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- What causes Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- How long does it take for Raynaud’s phenomenon to develop?
- What workers are at risk of Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- What tests are available for Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- What treatment is available for Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- How do you live with Raynaud’s phenomenon?
- How can Raynaud’s phenomenon be prevented?
- Are there laws regarding vibration exposure at work?
- Raynaud’s Phenomenon (CCOHS)
Photo Attribution: Tcal at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
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Journal Article
Raynaud’s phenomenon in the occupational context (Full Article) (PDF)
- Cordeiro, R. A., & Andrade, R. M. D. (2019). Raynaud’s phenomenon in the occupational context. Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira, 65, 1314-1320. https://www.scielo.br/j/ramb/a/RtDP77R5nYBVPbhYwrf5Zbd/?format=pdf&lang=en
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- Effects of Vibration (Victorian Trades Hall Council, Au)
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Exposure Limit
- Canada: Many Canadian jurisdictions do not have regulations for vibration exposure (CCOHS)
- Refer to Federal or Provincial Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act, OHS Regulation etc. to take reasonable precautions to ensure worker’s health and safety.
- British Columbia
- for hand-arm vibration, the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists publication entitled Threshold Limit Values and Biological Exposure Indices, dated 2003, as amended from time to time;
- for whole-body vibration, ANSI Standard S3.18-2002/ISO 2631-1-1997, Mechanical Vibration and Shock – Evaluation of Human Exposure to Whole Body Vibration – Part 1: General Requirements, as amended from time to time;
- British Columbia
- Refer to Federal or Provincial Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act, OHS Regulation etc. to take reasonable precautions to ensure worker’s health and safety.
- Canada: Many Canadian jurisdictions do not have regulations for vibration exposure (CCOHS)
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- ACGIH:
- Vibration – Measurement, Control and Standards (CCOHS)
- See Sections:
- What are the standards or guidelines for exposure to hand-arm vibration?
- What are the standards or guidelines for exposure to whole-body vibration?
- See Sections:
- Vibration – Measurement, Control and Standards (CCOHS)
- ACGIH:
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- Hand Arm Vibration (PDF) (University of Houston Clear Lake)
- See Table 1 or
- Hand-Arm Vibration of the TLV® booklet
- Whole Body Vibration (PDF Slides) (CCOHS)
- See Slide 59 or
- Hand Arm Vibration (PDF) (University of Houston Clear Lake)
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- Whole-Body Vibration of the TLV® booklet
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- EU Vibration Exposure and Action Limits (EUR-LEX)
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- Hand Arm Vibration
- the daily exposure limit value standardized to an 8-hour reference period: 5 m/s;
- the daily exposure action value standardized to an 8-hour reference period: 2.5 m/s.
- Whole Body Vibration
- the daily exposure limit value standardized to an 8-hour reference period: 1.15 m/s2 or, at the choice of the Member State concerned, a vibration dose value of 21 m/s 1.75.
- the daily exposure action value standardized to an 8-hour reference period shall be 0.5 m/s2 or, at the choice of the Member State concerned, a vibration dose value of 9.1 m/s 1.75.
- Hand Arm Vibration
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Control and Prevention
- Vibration – Measurement, Control and Standards (CCOHS)
- Vibration – Understand and minimize the effects of vibration (Public Health Scotland)
- Best Practices – Vibration at the Work Site (PDF) (Government of Alberta)
- Introduction to Vibration
- Vibration Health Effects
- Identifying and Assessing Vibration Exposures
- Methods for Reducing Hand-Arm Vibration Hazards
- Methods for Reducing Whole Body Vibration Hazards
- More:
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Journal Article
- Fisk, K., & Ek, Å. (2021, June). A Study of Attitudes and Behaviors in Industries Regarding Implementation of Low-Vibrating Machines and Measures to Reduce Vibration Injuries. In Congress of the International Ergonomics Association (pp. 63-69). Springer, Cham. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-74611-7_9
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Section 3: Diseases caused by compressed or decompressed air
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Health Effects:
- What is compressed air (SafeManitoba)
- Barometric Pressure Increased (ILO, UN)
- Barometric Pressure Reduced (ILO, UN)
- Reduced oxygen environments (Hypoxic environments) (HSE, UK)
- A health risk assessment of working in hypoxic atmospheres (PDF) (HSE, UK)
- Section 4 Results (Hypoxic work environment and effects of hypoxia)
- Section 5 for major physiological, medical and psychological effects of various hypoxic state
- Commercial Diving (OSHA)
- Overview
- Standards
- Hazards and Solutions
- Safety and Health Programs
- Additional Resources
- Scuba Diving: Decompression Illness & Other Dive-Related Injuries (CDC)
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In-depth Journal Article Reading
Decompression Sickness (in depth understanding)
- Cooper, J. S., & Hanson, K. C. (2019). Decompression sickness. https://europepmc.org/article/NBK/nbk537264
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Related Legislation
- in Canada
- General: Cleaning with Compressed Air (CCOHS)
- See Section:
- Where compressed air is allowed for cleaning, how can I do it safely?
- See Section:
- Federal:
- Regulated under various sections in Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations SOR/86-304
- Compressed Air
- Division I General Control of Hazards
- Section 10.21 – 10.22
- Division I General Control of Hazards
- Diving:
- Compressed Air
- WHMIS
- Regulated under various sections in Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations SOR/86-304
- General: Cleaning with Compressed Air (CCOHS)
- in Canada
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- Provincial:
- For Compressed Air
- Provincial:
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- For diving:
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- Standards for Commercial Diving in USA:
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Safety Guidelines for Working with Compressed and Decompressed Air
- Cleaning with Compressed Air (CCOHS)
- About work in compressed air (HSE, UK)
- Compressed air safety (HSE, UK)
- How to Work Safely with – Compressed Gases (CCOHS)
- Compressed Gas Cylinder Safety (PDF) (uOttawa)
- Guide to the Occupational Diving Regulations for the Seafood Harvesting Industry (PDF) (NS, Canada)
- Decompression management (WorkSafe Queensland)
Section 4: Diseases Caused by Ionizing Radiations
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Radiation Basics:
- About radiation (Government of Canada)
- Ionizing Radiation – Occupational settings (OSHA)
- Units
- Radiation – Quantities and Units of Ionizing Radiation (CCOHS)
- What units are used for measuring radioactivity?
- Radiation – Quantities and Units of Ionizing Radiation (CCOHS)
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Health Effects
- Radiation Health Effects (EPA)
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Journal Article
Low dose or low dose rate ionizing radiation-induced health effect in the human
- Tang, F. R., & Loganovsky, K. (2018). Low dose or low dose rate ionizing radiation-induced health effect in the human. Journal of environmental radioactivity, 192, 32-47. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0265931X1830362X?casa_token=z6xM08nE5cEAAAAA:AfAFvpPT4QVhq4WpwRYtRI9FNtM2vjWfer4DvFurf_zP70w4gVBi_P60-KbmgqwrKa52tb7P
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Exposure Limit:
- ACGIH:
- The TLVs adopted by many jurisdictions as guidelines or legal limits: 20 mSv
- In Canada,
- the annual effective dose limit for the public: 1 mSv
- consistent with the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) recommended annual dose limit for the general public (1 mSv)
- based on information from regular monitoring of the most exposed workers, and their the average annual doses are 5 mSv per year.
- Quantities and Units of Ionizing Radiation – with exposure limit (CCOHS)
- the annual effective dose limit for the public: 1 mSv
- OSHA
- Whole body including head, trunk, active blood-forming organs, eyes lenses or reproductive organs: 1.25 rem per quarter
- Hands, forearms, feet and ankles: 18.75 rem per quarter
- Skin of whole body: 7.5 rem per quarter
- ACGIH:
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- Recommendations (ICRP)
- Radon Limit:
- Radon in Building (CCOHS)
- The annual occupational exposure limit: 50 mSv (milli-Sievert) of effective dose in one-year dosimetry period
- In Indoor for dwellings: 200 Bq/m3
- Radon in Building (CCOHS)
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Control & Prevention
- Ionizing Radiation (OSHA)
- About occupational radiation exposure (Government of Canada)
- International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) Guidance for Occupational Exposure
- Radiation and Your Patient: A Guide for Medical Practiioners (PDF) (ICRP)
- Personal exposure monitoring for ionizing radiation (dosimetry) (PDF) (Government of Alberta)
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Legislation
- Federal:
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Part X Hazardous Substances Division I General – Control of Hazards
- Section 10.26 Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation
- Part X Hazardous Substances Division I General – Control of Hazards
- Radiation Emitting Devices Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. R-1)
- Radiation Emitting Devices Regulations (C.R.C., c. 1370)
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Provincial:
- Federal:
Section 5: Diseases caused by optical (ultraviolet, visible light, infrared) radiations including laser
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Basics and Health Effect
- Non-Ionizing Radiation (OSHA)
- Non-Ionizing Radiation – Electromagnetic (PDF) (OHS Body of Knowledge, Au)
- Understanding Non-Ionizing EMR (P.3)
- Definition and Use, Health Effects and Risk Management of
- Extra Low Frequency Radiation (P.5)
- Radio Frequency Radiation (P.7)
- Infra-Red Radiation (P.11)
- Visible Light (P.13) (Also in Ergonomic Section)
- Ultraviolet Radiation (P.18)
- Lasers (P.25)
- Radiofrequency Radiation Profile
- Solar UV Radiation Profile
- Health effects of radiation (Government of Canada)
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Exposure Limits
- Health Canada
- OSHA:
- Radiofrequency and Microwave Radiation – Standards
- No specific OSHA standards for radiofrequency and microwave radiation issues
- Below highlights the OSHA standards and documents related to radiofrequency and microwave radiation:
- General Industry (29 CFR 1910) – Occupational Health and Environmental Control:
- 10 mW/sq. cm. (unenforceable for the U.S. Federal OSHA enforcement)
- Construction Industry (29 CFR 1926) – 1926 Subpart D:
- 10 mW/sq.cm.
- General Industry (29 CFR 1910) – Occupational Health and Environmental Control:
- ACGIH
- Documentation of the Threshold Limit Values for Physical Agents, 7th Edition:
- Provides consensus exposure limits for radiofrequency and microwave radiation.
- Documentation of the Threshold Limit Values for Physical Agents, 7th Edition:
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Controls
- Radiation (non-ionizing) (WorkSafeBC) – with health effects and risk reduction
- International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)
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Legislation:
- Federal
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Part X Hazardous Substances Division I General – Control of Hazards
- Section 10.26 Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation
- Part X Hazardous Substances Division I General – Control of Hazards
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Provincial
- Federal
Section 6: Diseases caused by exposure to extreme temperatures
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General:
- Thermal Comfort for Office Work (CCOHS)
- What is meant by thermal comfort?
- What temperature should an office be?
- What impact does air velocity have?
- What role do the other factors play?
- Humidity and Humidex
- Humidity and Your Health (Public Health Post.org)
- With recommendation
- Humidity and Your Health (Public Health Post.org)
- Thermal Comfort for Office Work (CCOHS)
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Journal Article
Indoor air humidity, air quality, and health – An overview (Full Article)
- Wolkoff, P. (2018). Indoor air humidity, air quality, and health–An overview. International journal of hygiene and environmental health, 221(3), 376-390. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1438463917306946
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Literature Review:
- Baughman, A. (1996). Indoor Humidity and Human Health–Part I: Literature Review of Health Effects of Humidity. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Edward-Arens/publication/292036403_Indoor_humidity_and_human_health_-_Part_I_Literature_review_of_health_effects_of_humidity-influenced_indoor_pollutants/links/5807a9db08ae5ed04bfe7917/Indoor-humidity-and-human-health-Part-I-Literature-review-of-health-effects-of-humidity-influenced-indoor-pollutants.pdf
- Humidex Rating and Work (CCOHS)
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Temperature Conditions – Hot
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Basics and Health Effect
- Basic Knowledges (CCOHS)
- Thermal stress in the work place (Government of Canada)
- Section 6. Heat Stress
- Heat and Health (WHO)
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Legal Limits
- Canada Temperature Conditions – Legislation (CCOHS)
- TLV see Basic Knowledges (CCOHS)
- What are the exposure limits for working in hot environments?
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Control Measures
- Hot Environments – Control Measures (CCOHS)
- Hazard Alert: Heat Stress Guidelines (PDF) (Province of Nova Scotia)
- Heat Stress and Strain (ACGIH)
- TLV ®and its goal
- WBGT calculations
- Clothing Adjustment Values for Some Emsembles
- Screening Criteria for TLV® and Action Limit for Heat Stress Exposure
- Metabolic Rate Categories and the Representative Metabolite Rate with Example Activities
- Guidelines for Limiting Heat Strains
- Elements to Consider in Establishing a Heat Stress Management Program
- Job-Specific Controls
- Best Practice – Working Safely in the Heat and Cold (PDF) (Work Safe Alberta)
- Specific Jurisdiction Regulations and Guidelines for Outdoor Heat Exposure (P.32 – 38)
- ACGIH Screening Criteria for Heat Stress Exposure (P.40)
- Correction of TLV for Clothing (P. 41)
- Recommended Actions Based on the Humidex Reading (P.42)
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Temperature Conditions – Cold
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Basics and Health Effect
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Exposure Limit
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Control Measures
- Cold Environments – Working in the Cold (CCOHS)
- Cold Environments – Health Effects and First Aid (CCOHS)
- Wind chill index (Government of Canada)
- 7 steps to cold weather safety (Government of Canada)
- Cold Stress – Recommendations (CDC)
- It contains:
- Recommendations for Employers
- Recommendations for Workers
- It contains:
- Cold Stress Guide (OSHA)
- Best Practice – Working Safely in the Heat and Cold (PDF) (Work Safe Alberta)
- Specific Jurisdiction Regulations and Guidelines for Outdoor Cold Exposure (P.43 – 45)
- Work Warm-up Schedule for Outdoor Activities (P.49)
- Estimating Wind Speed (P.50)
- Wind Chill Calculation Chart (P.51)
- Controlling Exposure (P.53 – 61)
- Whenever relationship of the diseases with physical agents could not be clearly established, we should include all the possibilities in a scientifically sounded principle.
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Section 7: Other physical agents at work and their health effects
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Ergonomics, computer and workstation design; repetition, force
- About Ergonomic Hazards
- Ergonomic (CCOHS)
- Lifting, pushing, pulling
- Sitting, standing
- Musculoskeletal Disorders (MSDs)
- Lighting
- Shiftwork
- Office
- Tools
- Lighting Ergonomics – General (CCOHS)
- Ergonomic hazards (Comcare, Australian Government)
- Repetitive Strain Injuries: A Real Pain (CCOHS)
- What are work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs)? (CCOHS)
- Ergonomic (CCOHS)
- Identification and Control:
- Identifying and Addressing Ergonomic Hazards Workbook (PDF) (OSHA)
- Identify HAZARDS and RISKS in your OFFICE (Comcare, Australian Government)
- Ergonomic hazards (Comcare, Australian Government)
- See section: Eliminate ergonomic hazards
- Ergonomic Hazards (PDF)(UBerkeley)
- Risk Factors for Ergonomic Injuries
- Identifying Risk Factors
- Eliminate the Hazard
- Improve Work Policies and Procedures
- Provide Personal Protective Equipment
- Inspection Checklist for Ergonomic Risk Factors
- MSD Prevention Series: Prevention Guideline (Institute for Work & Health)
- lifting, NIOSH and ACGIH guidelines
- Lighting Standard and Canada Legislation
- Federal
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Part VI Lighting – Level of Lighting Standards refer to the Schedules:
- Schedule I – Office Areas
- Schedule II – Industrial Areas
- Schedule III – General Area
- Schedule IV – VDT Work
- Part VI Lighting – Level of Lighting Standards refer to the Schedules:
- Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (SOR/86-304)
- Provincial
- Federal
- About Ergonomic Hazards
Other Interesting Information
- Frequent Hand Washing for COVID-19 Prevention Can Cause Hand Dermatitis: Management Tips (Cureus)
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Journal Article
- Nasreen, S., & Sharafat, S. (2022). OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH OF WOMEN: ANALYZING PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACTS ON THEIR HEALTH. New Horizons (1992-4399), 16(1). http://www.greenwichjournals.com/index.php/NH/article/view/631
- Health Hazards in Construction (PDF) (OSHA)
- Impacts of Climate Change on Occupational Health and Safety (PDF) (IRSST)