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This update provides an assessment of the health improvements and building conditions at 25 Sigourney Street based on surveys conducted in 2001 and 2004. Findings indicate some improvement in respiratory symptoms, ongoing health issues, and the need for continued monitoring.
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Agenda • Introductions – Mary Lou Fleissner, Dr.PH. • NIOSH Update – Terri Pearce, Ph.D. • UConn Update – Eileen Storey, M.D. • Questions and Answers
August 2004 Survey25 Sigourney Street Terri A. Pearce, Ph.D. – Project Officer National Institute for Occupational Safety and HealthDivision of Respiratory Disease Studies Field Studies Branch Morgantown, West Virginia
Questions about 25 Sigourney Street • Has health improved? • Has the environment improved? • What happens next?
Overall Summary • There is evidence of improvement in symptoms reported in the 12 months prior to the 2004 survey • Some occupants of 25 Sigourney Street continue to have ongoing respiratory illness • Previous water damage is likely to have contributed to the health complaints • Ongoing health surveys are required to assess the effectiveness of dampness remediation
NIOSH Investigation • Union health hazard evaluation request in response to employee reports of physician-diagnosed diseases and symptoms • Became a joint request when management learned of the concerns
NIOSH 2001 and 2002 Surveys • September 2001 - Health questionnaire survey offered to everyone in the building • April 2002 – Environmental sampling • June 2002 – Offered medical testing to some employees
2001 and 2002 Findings • Two to three times the expected number of employees with asthma or wheezing • Persons reporting symptoms or respiratory diagnoses frequently had abnormal lung test results or asthma medication use • Mold and endotoxin levels in dust were associated with respiratory and skin symptoms
Building Repairs • Exterior repairs to correct balcony drainage, brick failure, window leaks, roof replaced • Interior replacement of water and mold damaged sheetrock • Interior repairs to bathroom core • Replacement of carpeting on some floors • Vacuuming of carpets, chairs, and partitions
2004 Post-Repair Survey • 7-8 months after roof repair • 3-4 months after post-repair cleaning • Health Assessment – Questionnaires and medical testing • Building Assessment – Dust sampling and real-time monitoring
Participation • 888 people in 2001 and 771 in 2004 • About 70% for both surveys 2001 2004
New Diagnoses from January 2003 to August 2004 • In employees hired 2003-2004 • 1 asthma diagnosis • In employees hired before 2003 • 6 asthma diagnoses • 1 hypersensitivity pneumonitis diagnosis* • 1 sarcoidosis diagnosis * also diagnosed with asthma
Non-Respiratory Symptoms - 2004In Last 12 months and 4 Weeks
Summary of 2004 questionnaire survey • DRS and DSS similar for physician diagnoses and respiratory symptoms • About half of participants reported lower and non-respiratory symptoms and 30% reported skin symptoms • More upper than lower respiratory symptoms
Has the percent of symptomatic employees changed between the 2001 and 2004 surveys? • We compared the results for the 481 employees who participated in both surveys
Asthma-like symptoms in the last 12 months, but not in the last 4 weeks
Have you had symptoms that you think may be related to the building? Comparison between 2001 and 2004 surveys
Summary of comparison2001/2002 to 2004 • There were decreases in the percent of employees reporting symptoms in the last 12 months but not occurring in the last 4 weeks • There were no decreases in the percent of employees reporting symptoms occurring weekly in the last 4 weeks • Decrease for DRS when asked: • Have you had symptoms that you think may be related to the building?
Did medical testing results change? • Lung function test results show similar relationships with symptom status in 2002 and 2004 • Positive allergy skin tests have decreased for all symptom groups • Persons with post-occupancy asthma continue to have fewer positive skin allergy tests than persons with pre-occupancy asthma
Have the dust levels changed? • Amounts of dust in the carpet are somewhat higher than measured in 2002 • Amounts of culturable fungi and endotoxin in floor dust are also slightly higher than in 2002 • Amounts of cat and dog allergen are lower than in 2002
Real-time Monitoring • Temperature and relative humidity were within the recommended ranges • Some carbon dioxide measurements on 15th floor were above the recommended level • Water activity of some carpets could support microbial growth
Have we answered the questions? • There were decreases in the percent of employees reporting symptoms in the last 12 months but not occurring in the last 4 weeks • There were no decreases in the percent of employees reporting symptoms occurring weekly in the last 4 weeks • Dust levels were similar with fungi and endotoxin levels being somewhat higher in carpets with cat and dog allergen being somewhat lower
Next Steps • August health and environmental surveys • Follow-up for new employees • Building systems evaluation
Overall Summary • There is evidence of improvement in symptoms reported in the 12 months prior to the 2004 survey • Some occupants of 25 Sigourney Street continue to have ongoing respiratory illness • Previous water damage is likely to have contributed to the health complaints • Ongoing health surveys are required to assess the effectiveness of dampness remediation
NIOSH - Morgantown 1-800-232-2114 Terri Pearce, Ph.D. – Project Officer