Published in

IOP Publishing, Journal of Physics: Conference Series, (151), p. 012047, 2009

DOI: 10.1088/1742-6596/151/1/012047

Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Building an industry-wide occupational exposure database for respirable mineral dust - experiences from the IMA Dust Monitoring Programme

Journal article published in 2009 by Remko Houba, Jelle Vlaanderen ORCID, Richard Jongen, Hans Kromhout
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

Full text: Download

Red circle
Preprint: archiving forbidden
Red circle
Postprint: archiving forbidden
Green circle
Published version: archiving allowed
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Building an industry-wide database with exposure measurements of respirable mineral dust is a challenging operation. The Industrial Minerals Association (IMA-Europe) took the initiative to create an exposure database filled with data from a prospective and ongoing dust monitoring programme that was launched in 2000. More than 20 industrial mineral companies have been collecting exposure data following a common protocol since then. Recently in 2007 ArboUnie and IRAS evaluated the quality of the collected exposure data for data collected up to winter 2005/2006. The data evaluated was collected in 11 sampling campaigns by 24 companies at 84 different worksites and considered about 8,500 respirable dust measurements and 7,500 respirable crystalline silica. In the quality assurance exercise four criteria were used to evaluate the existing measurement data: personal exposure measurements, unique worker identity, sampling duration not longer than one shift and availability of a limit of detection. Review of existing exposure data in the IMA dust monitoring programme database showed that 58% of collected respirable dust measurements and 62% of collected respirable quartz could be regarded as 'good quality data' meeting the four criteria mentioned above. Only one third of the measurement data included repeated measurements (within a sampling campaign) that would allow advanced statistical analysis incorporating estimates of within- and between-worker variability in exposure to respirable mineral dust. This data came from 7 companies comprising measurements from 23 sites. Problematic data was collected in some specific countries and to a large extent this was due to local practices and legislation (e.g. allowing 40-h time weighted averages). It was concluded that the potential of this unique industry-wide exposure database is very high, but that considerable improvements can be made. At the end of 2006 relatively small but essential changes were made in the dust monitoring protocol and the data collection sheet. In addition a system of quality control was set up and each new set of data is thoroughly investigated before inclusion into the database. Recently, it became apparent that more than 80% of the measurement data collected since winter 2005/2006 is of high quality. The IMA Dust Monitoring Programme Database contains personal measurements of more than 2,000 monitored workers who are representative of in total 5,000 workers in the industrial minerals production. This unique prospective exposure database will prove to be very valuable when health effects due to exposure to respirable mineral dust among these workers will be evaluated in the future.