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Hazardous Materials Use in Auto Repair Integrated Strategies to Protect Health & the Environment. Julia Quint, PhD HESIS, DHS www.dhs.ca.gov/ohb WRPPN Conference Granlibakken, CA October 16, 2003. Hazard Evaluation System & Information Service (HESIS).
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Hazardous Materials Use in Auto RepairIntegrated Strategies to Protect Health & the Environment Julia Quint, PhD HESIS, DHS www.dhs.ca.gov/ohb WRPPN Conference Granlibakken, CA October 16, 2003
Hazard Evaluation System & Information Service (HESIS) • Established by CA Legislature in 1979 in response to DBCP-induced sterility of workers • Collect and evaluate information to establish harmful effects on health • Provide “early warnings” and reliable information to prevent hazards to workers • Recommend protective occupational health standards to Cal/OSHA
n-Hexane-Induced Nerve DamageDelayed Diagnoses of Auto Mechanics • Damages nerves in feet,legs, hands, and arms • Can last a long time & may be permanent • Acute symptoms include headache, dizziness, lost of appetite, drowsiness
ProductNew Chemical(s) Wurth Brake & Isopropyl alc. Parts Cleaner Heptane Berryman B-12 Toluene; MeOH Chemtool Carb & Acetone Choke Cleaner Malco Brake MeOH; Xylene & Parts Cleaner Mineral spirits Mantek DJC PS 1-BP; isopropyl Aerosol alcohol Id’d from 2003 MSDSs (Internet)
Integrating Illness, Injury & Pollution Prevention Strategies Some of the Benefits • Prevents transfer of risks • Decreases workers’ overall health risks • Decreases health risks to communities • Simplifies regulatory compliance • Cost-effective • Promotes sharing of expertise / collaboration • Broadens support for worker H&S and P2
HESIS Auto Repair Industry ProjectOverview • Two-year EPA P2 Incentives for States Grant (in progress) • Collaboration with the Institute for Research & Technical Assistance (IRTA), a non-profit NGO. • Develop & demonstrate the effectiveness of water-based, aerosol automotive cleaners • Develop integrated P2 / health and safety guidance for the auto repair industry
Auto Repair Industry Project Objectives • Work with diverse auto repair facilities to develop & demonstrate the effectiveness of water-based aerosol cleaners (IRTA) • Conduct site visits & key informant interviews to obtain specific information • Review workers compensation data • Review Cal/OSHA compliance data • Develop and disseminate integrated environ. protection and H &S guidance and resource information. • Disseminate case studies (IRTA)
Auto Repair Project Workers Compensation Claims Data Analysis Data from a large CA workers compensation insurer 10,861 claims –SIC= 7538 (general automotive) –WCIS = 8389 (automobile or truck repair garages) Time Period = 1/1/93 to 6/30/02 Selected Codes(n=34) Cause of injuryNature of injuryPart of bodyTot.benefit pd. Selected Cause of Injury Codes (n=91) Chemical (n>5) Dust, Gases, Fumes or Vapors (n>5) Potential Solvent-Related Claims= Chemical & Dust, Gases,Fumes or vapors
Top Five Body Parts Injured Potential Solvent-Related Claims (N=175)
Top Five Nature of Injury Potential Solvent-Related Claims (N=175)
Cost All Other Claims n = 9,166 Potential Solvent-Related Claims n = 149 Total Benefit Paid $59, 590, 301.26 $354,920.43 Mean $6501.23 $2028.12 Median $364.91 $225.33 Range $0 - $590,172.46 $0 - $83,084.86 CA Auto Repair Workers Compensation Total Benefits Paid
CA Auto Repair IndustryWorkers Compensation Claim DataPreliminary Conclusions Workers compensation data probably severely underestimates auto repair workers’ illness and injury due to solvent-based cleaners. Some of the limitations include: • Lack of recognition and/or appreciation of solvent-related toxicity and health effects by employers and employers • Failure of healthcare providers to take occupational health histories and to recognize and diagnose work-related illness and disease due to chemical exposures • Long latency period for cancer and other chronic diseases caused by some solvents
CA Auto Repair IndustryWorkers Compensation Claim DataPreliminary Conclusions (Cont’d) Morbidity due to the use of solvent-based automotive cleaners could have been underestimated in our analysis due to: • Lack of data from other insurers • Variable and inconsistent coding of claims • Lack of data on owners who are also workers • Workers who don’t report “under the table” family members
Auto Repair Shop Site Visits Preliminary Findings Key information from 5 small shops in San Francisco • Potential safety hazards due to physical plant contraints (crowding of equip; poor housekeeping) • Mobile water-based brake cleaners and solvent-based aerosol cleaners both used. Many different solvents in aerosols • Full-service vendors provide water-based parts & brake cleaners (dispose & recycle waste, sell solvent-based aerosols) • Labels on cans used for hazard info instead of MSDSs • General lack of knowledge about health effects of solvents
Auto Repair Project Key Informant InterviewsMethod • 14 Key Informant Telephone Interviews 6 employers dealership service mgr. P2 trainer 5 environ. inspectors chemist/research director • Instrument: Open-ended questions • auto repair shop demographics • purchase • use • regulatory issues • Themes Derived from Coded Notes
Auto Repair Project Key Informant InterviewsSummary Themes • Auto Repair Shop Demographics • small shops; 3-5 employees; 30-45 cars/day • Purchase • effectiveness; cost; vendor recommendations • Use/Health/Safety • aqueous-based baths & solvent-based aerosols • no H&S information or MSDSs; • health concerns: none; skin (hands); “breathing toxins” • protection: latex gloves & open air ventilation • Regulatory Issues • aware of environmental regs; various agency inspections; better outreach needed; unaware of CAL/OSHA regs; have had no Cal/OSHA inspections
Auto Repair Project Next Steps • Conduct key informant interviews with: - union workers (IAM) - Automotive Service Council members • Analyze Cal/OSHA auto repair industry data (IMIS) • Develop and disseminate integrated P2 and H&S educational guidance information for auto repair shops