World Trade Center and Occupational Health/ALS among Veterans Flashcards

1
Q

Public health role in disasters

A

-Contain or remove sources of contamination, or
evacuate the populace to prevent exposures.
-Conduct appropriate environmental sampling and
analysis to quantify risk and monitor progress of
remediation.
-Protect worker health and safety by ensuring
availability and use of protective measures, and by
monitoring illnesses and injuries to inform
modifications in the use of protective measures.
-Provide regular advisories to the public and the
medical community.

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2
Q

Fine dust hazards

A

-Dusts were found to consist primarily of calcium sulfate
(gypsum) and calcium carbonate (calcite) from crushed
building materials such as cement, concrete aggregate,
ceiling tiles, and wallboard.
-PM2.5 dusts induced lung inflammation and hyper-
responsiveness when high doses were given to mice
directly into their airways.
-It was estimated that healthy people exposed to ~425
µg PM2.5/m3 air for 8 hr would receive a dose
comparable to the high dose in mice, and could
experience lung inflammation and hyper-
responsiveness.
-It was also determined that larger dust particles (PM
2.5-10µm) could have contributed to respiratory
problems reported in persons working and living near
Ground Zero.
-Analysis showed the dust to be a mixture of building
debris and combustion products.
-In addition to gypsum, calcite, and concrete dust, it
included asbestos, crystalline silica, glass fiber, lead,
and toxic organics such as PAHs, PCBs, dioxins, and
furans.
-WTC dust presented exposure hazards for workers
and the public immediately after the disaster, and for
weeks later as settled dusts were resuspended by
work activities or weather.

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3
Q

Health effects (acute, chronic)

A

-Gypsum and calcite irritate the mucus membranes of
the eye, nose, throat, and upper airways.
CaCO3 dust causes coughing, sneezing, and nasal
irritation.
-The high concentrations of gypsum and calcite
suggest that potentially toxic effects may extend to the
lower airways.
-Respiratory Illness
-The major health effect from acute exposures to fine
particulate WTC dust appears to be a type of asthma
termed “reactive airways dysfunction syndrome”
(RADS).
-In addition to RADS, some developed persistent
cough and gastric reflux.
-Long-term health effects have been reported:
-Of 74 emergency responders from Ohio Task Force
-One working at Ground Zero, 37 became ill: 3 were
hospitalized with pneumonia, 8 showed extreme
weight loss, 2 were diagnosed with asthma and 1
with bronchitis, with the remainder experiencing a
variety of other respiratory disorders and rashes.
-In California, of 395 emergency responders who
volunteered to work at Ground Zero for the first three
weeks after 9/11, at least 100 filed workers’
compensation claims because of illness.
-Many of the 500 NY City firefighters have qualified
for disability retirement because of persistent
respiratory conditions due to WTC dust.
-Long-term epidemiology studies of exposed workers
will investigate increased risk for a variety of cancers.
-City and federal officials downplayed any potential
hazards from the dust.
-An NIEHS report detailed the lack of any organized
safety and health protection plans, noting that of 1350
construction workers at Ground Zero, probably fewer
than 20% were medically certified to wear respiratory
protection.

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4
Q

Federal response to World Trade Center disaster

A

-With environmental data showing a lack of “immediate
health risks” EPA announced a cleanup plan in
conjunction with NYC, FEMA, OSHA, and NY State.
-Lower Manhattan residents had option of having their
units:
-Tested for asbestos
-Cleaned & then re-tested by professional cleaners on
contract with the government
-Residents could also request a free HEPA vacuum
cleaner through the program.
-In February 2002, EPA set health-based benchmarks
(concentrations) for contaminants of potential concern
(COPC) for indoor air and settled dust.
-Identified as COPC were: PAHs, dioxin, lead, asbestos,
fibrous glass, crystalline silica.
-Long-term, on-going epidemiological studies will help
determine chronic health effects on workers and the
public.

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5
Q

9/11 Health and Compensation Act

A

-In 2010, Congress passed the 9/11 Health and
Compensation Act to provide medical monitoring and
treatment benefits to eligible WTC responders and city
residents (claimants not to exceed 25,000).
-In March 2011, NY City agreed to pay up to $657
million to some 10,000 rescue and recovery workers
with health claims from dust exposures.
-Current epidemiological data show that 15 years after
the 9/11 WTC attacks, rescue and recovery workers
continue to have a substantial burden of physical and
mental health problems. These findings emphasize the
need for continued monitoring and treatment of the
WTC rescue and recovery population.

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6
Q

Definition of occupational health

A

Occupational health is the multidisciplinary approach to the anticipation, recognition, evaluation, and prevention and control of work-related illnesses and injuries.

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7
Q

U.S. government agencies, and their responsibilities, that are focused on occupational health and safety

A

-The National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH) is the federal agency responsible for:
Conducting workplace health & safety research
Making recommendations for the prevention of work-
related injury and illness.
-NIOSH is part of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) in the Department of Health and
Human Services. WWW.CDC.GOV/NIOSH/

-The Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) is the federal regulatory agency within the US
Department of Labor responsible for the oversight of
health and safety in America’s workplaces.
-OSHA provides enforcement of workplace health and
safety regulations, wherein its mission is to save lives,
prevent injuries, and protect the health of America’s
workers. www.osha.gov/
-To accomplish this, federal and state governments
work in partnership with the more than 100 million
working men and women and their six and a half million
employers who are covered by the Occupational Safety
and Health Act of 1970.

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8
Q

Things to which coalition troops were exposed during deployment to the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf War

A

Oil Well Fire Smoke, Dust, Sand
Scud Missiles, Depleted Uranium
Nerve Agents, PB Pills
Permethrin, Vaccinations

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9
Q

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (type of neurons affected, symptoms)

A
  • Neurofilament buildup
  • Diseased nerve fiber
  • Wasted skeletal muscle
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10
Q

Steps of cluster investigation (and how to complete each step)

A
  • Team
    • Industrial hygienists
    • Epidemiologists
    • Neurologists/physicians
    • Health promotion specialists
    • Medical geographers
    • Engineers
  • Objectives
    • Is this a cluster?
    • What is the cause?
  • Study Design
    • Cohort
      • Need a huge sample size
      • Sometimes limited exposure data
    • Case-control
      • Good for rare outcomes
      • Often very detailed exposure data
  • Assessment of ALS
    • In-person neurological exam
      • Preferred
    • Medical record review and abstraction
      • For deceased patients
  • Exposure Assessment
    • Personal monitoring difficult
    • Biomarkers difficult
    • Military records
      • Time and location, branch, deployment
      • Virtually nothing on exposures
    • Questionnaires/interviews
  • Data Collection and Analysis
    • Depleted uranium
    • Oil well fire smoke
    • PB pills
    • Scud missiles
  • Recommendations
    • Hierarchy of controls
      • Elimination
      • Substitution
      • Engineering controls
      • Administrative controls
      • Personal protective equipment
    • Surveillance/registries
      • Exposure
      • Medical
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11
Q

Hierarchy of (exposure) controls

A
  • Elimination
  • Substitution
  • Engineering controls
  • Administrative controls
  • Personal protective equipment
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