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Cholinesterase Monitoring ~ What Washington is Learning Margaret Tucker WA State Department of Agriculture
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What Will Be Covered Program overview ChE results to date Findings of workplace investigations Training focus
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Program overview Began in 2004 Lawsuit brought by labor advocates WA Supreme Court required Labor & Industries to institute rulemaking for cholinesterase (ChE) monitoring program Agricultural employers only
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Program overview Who must comply? – Growers with employees who handle Category 1 or 2 organophosphate or N-methyl carbamate pesticides
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Program overview What must they do? – Document hours of handling of covered pesticides – Offer testing to employees who handle covered pesticides
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Program overview ChE Testing – Baseline before handling covered pesticides – Follow-up testing when exposure threshold met 2004 – 50 hours in consecutive 30 days 2005 – 30 hours in consecutive 30 days
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Program Overview If ChE depression > 20%, employer must: – Perform an investigation of: work practices clothes respiratory protection sanitation – Keep a record of the investigation – Record actions taken to correct problems
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Program Overview If > 30% decrease in red blood cell ChE or > 40% decrease in plasma ChE: – Work practice investigation by L&I – Employee temporarily removed from exposure Covered by medical removal protection benefits May return to handling tasks when ChE levels within 20% of baseline
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Program Overview With ChE depressions, symptoms are generally reversed when – Exposure is stopped – ChE levels increase No pesticide illness cases in WA as a result of ChE depressions
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Year Employees receiving baseline test Employees receiving follow-up test Number of periodic or follow-up tests Employees with depressions > 20% Employees with depressions >30% RBC ChE or >40% plasma ChE 2004 2,630580104897 (16.7% of those receiving follow-up test) 22 (3.8% of those receiving follow-up test) 119 (20.5% of those receiving follow-up test) 2005 (as of 7/11/2005) 2,211577799 47 (8.1% of those receiving follow-up test) 9 (1.6% of those receiving follow-up test) 56 (9.7% of those receiving follow-up test) Summary of ChE Monitoring Data Total
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations* BACKGROUND INFORMATION 27 Employers - all pome fruit growers About 75% of the farms > 500 acres About 1/3 had more than 10 handlers * NOTE: ADDITIONAL INVESTIGATIONS ONGOING
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations ChE-inhibiting pesticides handled by workers with significant ChE depressions – Lorsban – Sevin – Guthion – Carzol
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Respiratory Protection No respirator cartridge change out schedule or overuse of cartridges13 Using half-face respirator 17 Improper fit-tests 3 Wrong prefilters for oil2
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations General Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Spray glasses not chemical proof1 Cotton caps (7 wearing sweatshirt hoods also) 9 Wearing bump cap 1 Cotton gloves under nitrile2
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Decontamination PPE decontamination inadequate 11 Application equipment decon inadequate 3 PPE removed & placed on contaminated surface (e.g. tractor) 3
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Decontamination Adjust respirator without glove decon. 1 Smoking without washing/decon. 1 Equipment used for other activities w/o decontamination (e.g. tractor used w/o cleaning) 2
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Handling Activities Eye flush supplies missing3 Eyewash supplies missing or not working4 Drift exposure (spray on face reported)3 WPS training cited inadequate4
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Change of clothes not provided2 Improper respirator storage 1 No respiratory protection program 1 Improper respirator maintenance 1
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations Preliminary data highlights many factors making simple conclusions difficult Only evaluating employees with depressions – How do their practices differ from those without depressions?
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations AREAS OF CONCERN: Wearing absorbent caps and/or half-face respirators when applying Lorsban/oil tank mix with airblast sprayers Required PPE not available Improper use of PPE PPE decontamination inadequate or not performed at necessary times
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Preliminary Data from 2005 Research Investigations AREAS OF CONCERN: Personal hygiene practices Equipment decontamination – none or insufficient. Multiple users w/varying practices Safety standards/best practices not being carried “down the line”
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Training Focus At all levels: Growers Safety officers Foremen and crew bosses Handlers Coordinated, partnership effort: Industry, WSDA, WSU, DOH, L&I, PNASH
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Training Focus How? Train the Trainer Hands-On Handler Training Spanish/English Recertification Programs Washington State Horticultural Association Governor’s Ag Safety Day WSDA/WSU sponsored courses WSU Decontamination Video WSDA focused newsletter to ag employers
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Training Focus Growers & Handlers Emphasize personal, equipment and PPE decontamination every time Eliminate use of absorbent caps, etc. Convert to full face respirators where appropriate Follow farm safety policies
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Training Focus Growers, Safety Officers, Foreman Communicate results of L&I investigations Encourage them to: Create and nurture a safety culture Develop, implement and actively enforce pesticide safety policies Ensure adequate availability, use and decontamination of protective equipment
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More Information Go to www.Lni.wa.govwww.Lni.wa.gov Click on the Topics Index at the top of the page Find “Cholinesterase” Click on “Cholinesterase monitoring” Call 1-800-4BE-SAFE (423-7233) and select “pesticide blood testing” E-mail: toug235@Lni.wa.gov – Englishtoug235@Lni.wa.gov serp235@Lni.wa.govserp235@Lni.wa.gov – Spanish
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Thank You! Margaret Tucker WA State Dept. of Agriculture (360) 902-2015 mtucker@agr.wa.govtucker@agr.wa.gov agr.wa.gov/PestFert/
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