What is MIOSHA? • Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Act (P.A. 154 of 1974, as amended) • Allows enforcement of occupational safety and health.

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Transcript What is MIOSHA? • Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Act (P.A. 154 of 1974, as amended) • Allows enforcement of occupational safety and health.

What is MIOSHA?
• Michigan Occupational Safety and Health
Act (P.A. 154 of 1974, as amended)
• Allows enforcement of occupational safety
and health regulations at the state level
versus the federal level (OSHA)
Definition - “employee”
• “A person permitted to work by an employer”
• Definition of an employee includes:
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volunteers
students
interns
temporary help
Employer’s
Responsibilities
• Furnish to each employee a workplace that is
free from recognized hazards that are causing,
or likely to cause, death or serious physical
harm
• Comply with standards, regulations and orders
issued pursuant to the Act
• Keep employees informed of their protections
and obligations under the Act including
applicable rules and standards
• Provide PPE at employer’s expense when
required by a standard
Employee’s
Responsibilities
• Comply with standards and regulations
covered under MIOSHA
• Never remove, displace, damage, destroy or
carry off a safeguard furnished or provided for
use in the workplace
• Cannot interfere in any way with the use of a
safeguard by another person
Other Provisions Under
MIOSHA
• Employer/Employee participation in compliance
inspections/investigations
• Inspections: survey to detect presence of hazards
and compliance with Act
• Investigations: detailed evaluation of working
conditions
• Discrimination
• Imminent danger
Other Provisions Under
MIOSHA
• Notification of fatality or catastrophe
• Within 8 hours
• 1 fatality or 3 or more hospitalizations from same
incident
• Recordkeeping
• Variances
• Permanent
• Temporary
Inspection Procedures
• Opening conference
• Programs
• I&I log (Forms 300, 300A,
301)
• Hazard Communication
• MIOSHA poster
• Others (i.e., respirator)
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Walk-through of facility
Sampling
Ventilation Check
Closing conference
Report sent
MIOSHA Website to
find I&I forms:
www.michigan.gov/cis
/0,1607,7-15411407_30929--,00.html
Health Hazards of
Abrasive Blasting
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Silica
Noise
Metals
Mechanical
What is Silica?
• “Crystalline Silica” and “Quartz” refer to the
same thing
• 2nd most common mineral in the earth’s crust
• Major component of sand, rock, granite and
mineral ore
• Toxic and less/nontoxic forms
Types of Silica
NON/LESS TOXIC
TOXIC
Silica, Crystalline
Silica, Amorphous
(as dust)
Trade
Names
Trade Names
 Diatomaceous earth
 Cristobalite
 Diatomaceous silica
 Tridymite
 Diatomite
 Tripoli
 Quartz
 Silica Gel
Common-Sandblasters  Silicon Dioxide
(amorphous)
What is Abrasive
Blasting?
• Operations where an abrasive is forcibly
applied to a surface by pneumatic or hydraulic
pressure or by centrifugal force.
• Does not apply to steam blasting or steam cleaning
or hydraulic-cleaning methods where work is done
without the aid of abrasives
• Frequently used for:
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cleaning sand from foundry castings
cleaning and removing paint from metal surfaces
finishing tombstones
etching and frosting glass
What is Silicosis?
• Lung disease
• disabling
• nonreversible
• sometimes fatal
• Cause: Inhalation of respirable crystalline
silica
• 1+ million American workers exposed/year
• 250+ Americans will die with silicosis
• No cure!
Who Is At Risk?
• Blasters using silica sand as an abrasive
• Blasters without adequate protection
• Workers near the blast areas
• cleaners
• pot tenders
• painters
• Silicosis is preventable if employers and
employees work together to reduce exposures
Why & What We Breathe
Inhalation and Exhalation
• Oxygen/Carbon Dioxide Exchange
• Air & Particulates
• Small fraction of inhaled particles are deposited
• Remainder are exhaled or removed
• Particle size determines what stays in the lung
Respirable Dust
• Less than 10 microns (µ)
diameter
• WHAT’S A MICRON?
• 1/24,000 of an inch
• Human Hair
• 40 - 150 microns in diameter
• Respirable Silica that
causes Silicosis:
• 0.2-5.0 (µ)
Your Bronchial Tree
• Resembles the
Branches on a Tree
• Divided into Smaller
and Smaller Branches
• Bronchi
• Bronchioles
• Business End
• Alveoli
How Does Exposure
Occur?
• During blasting, silica sand fractures into very
fine particles and becomes airborne
• Particles and dusts are inhaled and, if small
enough, become imbedded in the lungs
Disease Process
• Silica particles enter the alveoli and become
trapped
• Macrophages (white blood cells) try to “eat”
and remove the silica from the lung
• Silica causes macrophage cells to break and
release material into lung tissue which causes
scarring (fibrosis)
• Scarring develops & grows around silica
particles causing (nodules) to form
What are the Health
Effects?
• Early stages, may not notice any health
effects
• As condition worsens, nodules become larger,
making breathing more difficult
• Lungs can’t get enough oxygen from the air
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may die from suffocation
• May be complicated by tuberculosis
Forms of Silicosis
• ACUTE
• CHRONIC
• Simple
• Complicated
• Accelerated
Acute Silicosis
• Symptoms develop within a few weeks to
4-5 years after initial exposure
• Very high exposure concentrations
• Fluid accumulations in lungs
Chronic Silicosis
• Simple
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• Complicated
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• Accelerated
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10+ years of exposure
relatively low exposure
10+ years of exposure
relatively low exposure
Symptoms develop 5-10
years after exposure
moderate exposure
Chronic Silicosis
• Simple Silicosis
• Nodules in upper lungs
• Nodules are small
• No symptoms
• Accelerated Silicosis
• Nodule formation
similar to simple
• Symptoms similar to
simple or complicated
• Complicated Silicosis
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Nodules in lungs
Nodules are large
Symptoms
Secondary disease
Symptoms
• Dry or productive
cough
• Breathlessness
• Loss of appetite
• Pain in chest
• Malaise
• Weight loss
• Secondary disease
• TB
• Respiratory failure
• Congestive heart
failure
Tuberculosis
• Silica affects the cells that control TB
infection (macrophages)
• People with chronic silicosis more likely to
get TB infections
• Symptoms:
• Coughing up blood
• Fever
• Shortness of breath
Carcinogenicity
• Respirable crystalline silica has been
classified as a Group I “known human
carcinogen”
• Lung Cancer
• Silica exposure linked to:
• Stomach Cancer
• Skin Cancer
• Lymphatic Cancer
Lung Cancer
International Agency for Research on Cancer
(IARC) has classified respirable
crystalline silica:
KNOWN CANCER CAUSING
AGENT
• Lung Cancer
• Symptoms:
Coughing up blood
Chest Pain
Shortness of breath
Diagnosis
• Occupational work
history
• Symptoms
• Chest X-ray
• Pulmonary function
test
Medical Exams
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Baseline and every 3 years
Medical and occupational history
Chest X-ray
Pulmonary function test
TB skin test
NO CURE
• Only secondary
complications treated
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TB
Respiratory Failure
Lung Cancer
Heart Disease
Occupational Disease
Report
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Within 10 days
All known or suspected occupational disease
Employer, physician, clinic, hospital
Annual summary
MIOSHA-MTSD-51 form
MIOSHA Website to find Occupation Disease
Report Form: www.michigan.gov/cis/0,1607,7154-11407_30929---,00.html
Noise
• Noise: Unwanted sound
• When noise exposure is too intense or
prolonged, may cause harmful effects:
• Temporary or permanent hearing loss
• Fatigue, irritability, tension, circulatory effects
• May not be able to hear warning signals
Noise Rules
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Exposure Monitoring
PEL = 90 dBA
AL = 85 dBA
• Hose noise must be monitored
• If above PEL, engineering or administrative
controls must be implemented
• Seek out quieter equipment
Audiometric Testing
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If above AL (action level)
Qualified personnel
Baseline
Annual - Standard
Threshold Shift (STS)
Hearing Protection
• Mandatory
• Selection (formable plugs, premolded plugs, ear muffs)
• Noise Reduction Rating (NRR)
• Amount of decibels that a given device will reduce noise
exposure
Protected dBA=Unprotected dBA-[NRR-7]
Example:
Unprotected Workplace Exposure dBA = 95
Ear protection NRR = 19
Protected dBA=95 – [19-7] = 95 – [12]
Protected dBA = 83
Metals
• Lead
• Long term exposure may result in damage to your
nervous system, reproductive system, kidneys and
blood forming system
• Cadmium
• Long term exposure may result in kidney damage,
increased risk of prostate and lung cancer
• Inorganic arsenic
• Skin irritant, damage to your nervous system, liver
and may cause lung cancer
Mechanical Hazards
• Media ricochet
• Being shot by another blaster
• Jammed hose
Preventing Silicosis
& Deaths From
Sandblasting
What Precautions Can
Reduce The Risk?
• Substitute Alternative Blasting Medias
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aluminum oxide
coal slag (watch out for arsenic)
steel shot and grit (low toxicity)
plastic media
corn cob
garnet
glass beads
copper slag (watch out for arsenic)
specular hematite (low toxicity)
What Precautions Can
Reduce The Risk?
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Post Warning signs to
mark areas contaminated
with crystalline silica
Provide Medical
Examinations, including
periodic x-rays, to all
potentially exposed
employees
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Worker Training should
include information on
health effects, work
practices, and protective
equipment for silica
Report All Cases of
Silicosis to the State on
MIOSHA-MTSD-51 form
(blue form)
What Precautions Can
Reduce The Risk?
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Conduct Air Monitoring
to measure worker
exposure
Use Proper Respiratory
Equipment when
exposures cannot be kept
below the NIOSH
Recommended Exposure
Limit (REL)
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Blast In Automatic Blast
Cleaning Machines or
Cabinets when possible,
permitting workers to
operate the machinery
from outside
Maintain Dust Control
Systems to make sure they
are working properly
What Precautions Can
Reduce The Risk?
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Practice Good Personal
Hygiene. Workers should
wash their hands and face
before eating, drinking or
smoking
Wear Disposable Clothes
Shower and Change
Clothes before leaving the
worksite
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Park Cars where they
will not be contaminated
with overspray
No Food, Drink or
Tobacco in blasting area
Respiratory Protection
• How to:
• Determine whether a respirator is necessary
• Select an appropriate respirator
• Determine whether a respirator fits properly
• Occupational Health Standard, Respiratory
Protection, Part 451
• Occupational Health Standard, Abrasive
Blasting, Part 523
When Do You Use
Respiratory Protection?
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PEL exceeded
IDLH/Oxygen deficiency
Engineering controls not feasible
Administrative controls not feasible
WHAT IS PEL?
• Permissible Exposure Limit
• OSHA PEL (respirable fraction)
10 mg/m3
% SiO2 + 2
• PEL varies by % crystalline silica
Abrasive Blasting
• Engineering controls
• enclosures
• containment
• ventilation
• Typically do not control exposures to below the
PEL of crystalline silica
• Respiratory protection is necessary
Abrasive Blasting
(Part 523)
• Only approved respirators may be used
• Employees must wear abrasive-blasting respirators when:
• Working inside blast-cleaning rooms
• Using silica sand in manual blasting operations where
operator is not physically separated from blasting operation
• When above PEL and operator not physically separated
from blasting operation
• Employees should wear respirators:
• During clean-up operations
NIOSH Table
• National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH)
• Specifies:
• Type of respirator to be worn at different
concentrations of silica exposure
• Based on the assigned protection factors (APF) of
the different types of respirators
Respirator APF
• Assigned Protection Factor (APF):
• The workplace level of respiratory
protection that a respirator or class of
respirators is expected to provide to
employees when the employer
implements a continuing, effective
respiratory protection program
Respirator MUC

Maximum Use Concentration:
– The maximum atmospheric concentration of a
hazardous substance from which an employee
can be expected to be protected when wearing a
respirator, and is determined by the APF of the
respirator or class of respirators and the exposure
limit of the hazardous substance.
– Determined mathematically by multiplying the APF
specified for a respirator by the required OSHA
PEL, short-term exposure limit, or ceiling limit.
When no OSHA exposure limit is available for a
hazardous substance, an employer must
determine an MUC on the basis of relevant
available information and informed professional
NIOSH Approved Abrasive
Blasting Respirators
• Continuous flow, loose hood, APF = 25
• Continuous flow, tight-fitting facepiece, APF = 50
• Positive Pressure, tight-fitting half-mask
facepiece, APF = 1000
• Pressure demand or positive pressure, tight-fitting
full facepiece, APF = 2000
Respirator User Notice 10/4/93
Respirator APF
1910.134(d)(3)(1)(A)
Notes for Table 1
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1
Employers may select respirators assigned
for use in higher workplace concentrations of
a hazardous substance for use at lower
concentrations of that substance, or when
required respirator use is independent of
concentration.
2 The assigned protection factors in Table 1
are only effective when the employer
implements a continuing, effective respirator
program as required by this section (29 CFR
1910.134), including training, fit testing,
maintenance, and use requirements.
Notes for Table 1
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This APF category includes filtering
facepieces, and half masks with elastomeric
facepieces.
4 The employer must have evidence provided
by the respirator manufacturer that testing of
these respirators demonstrates performance
at a level of protection of 1,000 or greater to
receive an APF of 1,000. This level of
performance can best be demonstrated by
performing a WPF or SWPF study or
equivalent testing. Absent such testing, all
other PAPRs and SARs with helmets/hoods
Notes for Table 1
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5
These APFs do not apply to
respirators used solely for escape. For
escape respirators used in association
with specific substances covered by 29
CFR 1910 subpart Z, employers must
refer to the appropriate substancespecific standards in that subpart.
Escape respirators for other IDLH
atmospheres are specified by 29 CFR
1910.134 (d)(2)(ii).
Medical Exams
• Consists of medical questionnaire
• PLHCP reviews questionnaire, recommends
follow-up examination if medically
necessary
• Frequency of medical evaluations (after
initial assessment) is event-related instead of
time-related
Medical Evaluations
• Required:
• When wearing a tight-fitting facepiece respirator
• Prior to fit-test and before first use
• PLHCP determines:
• Tests in the followup medical exam
• Restrictions
Respirator Fit Testing
• Type CE Abrasive Blasting Respirators
(hoods, helmets) DO NOT need to be fit
tested
• Negative or positive pressure tight-fitting
facepiece respirators MUST be fit tested
• Different sizes and models
• Pick size/model to fit person’s face
• Types of fit tests:
• Qualitative
• Quantitative
Fit Test Protocol
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Individual wears respirator
Series of exercises
Test atmosphere
Recommended protocol - Appendix A of the
Respiratory Protection Standard
Types of Fit Tests
• Qualitative:
• Test agent directed around the head of the
respirator wearer
• If user can detect agent, test is failed
• Quantitative:
• Test atmosphere
• Quantifies respirator fit using instrumentation
to determine the amount of leakage into the
respirator facepiece
Fit Tests
Qualitative Fit Test
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Banana oil
Irritant smoke
Saccharin challenge
Bitrex solution
Quantitative Fit Test
• Expensive machinery
• Fit Factors
• Outside to inside
concentration
Standard prohibits facial hair which interferes
with face - to - facepiece seal or valve function
User Seal Checks
• Assures a proper fit
• Face to facepiece seal
• Recommended protocols in Appendix B-1 of
Respirator Standard
• User Seal Check
• Positive pressure check
• Negative pressure check
• Not a substitute for Fit Testing
Maintenance & Care
• Clean and disinfect as often as necessary to
maintain a sanitary condition
• Inspect before and after each use and after
cleaning
• Store away from heat, cold, light, moisture,
dusts and chemicals
• See Appendix B-2 of 1910.134
Written Respiratory
Protection Program
• Standard Operating Procedures
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Respirator Selection
Medical Evaluations
Fit Testing
Proper use (emergency)
Maintenance Program
Respirator air supply monitoring
Employee Training
• Respiratory Hazards
• Proper use of Respirator
• Program Evaluation
Respirator Training
• Initial
• Competent person
• Topics
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Selection
Use and limits
Maintenance
How to wear
Good fit
Medical signs & symptoms
Compressors
• Locate so contaminated air cannot enter
• Low moisture content
• Inline air-purifying sorbent bed & filter
maintained
• Tag showing maintenance kept at
compressor
• Pressure reducing valve
Compressors
• Oil Lubricated
• Alarm for overheating
• CO monitor
• or both
• Non oil lubricated
• Assure CO not more than 10 ppm
Personal Protective
Equipment
• Hazard Assessment
• Selection
• Communication
• Fit
• Safe, reliable, & sanitary
• Clean, inspect & maintain
• MUST NOT use defective or damaged PPE
Hazard Assessment
• Written Certification (General Industry)
• Workplace assessed
• Certifier
• Date of workplace hazard assessment
• Major hazard: IMPACT of the ricocheting
abrasive media while blasting
PPE for Abrasive Blasters
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Disposable or washable work clothes
Heavy canvas or leather gloves
Heavy canvas or leather apron
Protective head, neck and shoulder gear
Safety shoes
Respirator
Protective Clothing
• Employees leave at worksite
• Dispose or employer launders
PPE Training
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When, why and what
How to wear
Limitations
Care and Maintenance
Disposal
Certify with
• employee’s name
• date of training
• subject of training
PPE Training
• Retraining required when:
• Workplace changes makes previous training
obsolete
• PPE changes makes previous training obsolete
• Employee knowledge or use of PPE indicates
retraining needed
Conclusion
• Hazard Assessment
• Training
• Head, neck &
shoulder protection
• Hand protection
• Body protection
• Hearing protection
• Safety shoes
• Respirator
Personal Hygiene
• Shower after work
• Wash hands & face before eating,
drinking or smoking
• No food, drink or tobacco in blast area
• Park cars away from area
• Vacuum clothing using a vacuum
equipped with a HEPA filter
Housekeeping
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Clean up dust promptly
Vacuum surfaces with HEPA filter
DO NOT dry sweep
DO NOT use compressed air for
cleaning surfaces or clothing
Awareness
Planning
Prevent
Silicosis