Friday, October 25, 2013

Annotated PELs from OSHA

OSHA has long recognized that its permissible exposure limits (PELs) for gases and vapors are in need of an update. Many of them have not been updated since the PELs were first promulgated over forty years ago. As this blog has commented previously, OSHA faces an enormous administrative burden to produce updated or new standards.

OSHA has just published annotated standards in which the OSHA PELs are placed side by side with the NIOSH Recommended exposure limit (REL) and the ACGIH threshold limit values (TLVs). As discussed previously, the OSHA PEL is a legal maximum exposure limit, whereas the NIOSH REL and the ACGIH are values set based on the best available science but are considered recommendations as opposed to legal limits.(Note in some jurisdictions outside the US, the ACGIH TLVs are legally enforceable, not in their own right, but because the legislature in that country/province/territory etc. has adopted them into their law).

In OSHA's own words:

OSHA also created another new web resource: the Annotated Permissible Exposure Limits, or annotated PEL tables, which will enable employers to voluntarily adopt newer, more protective workplace exposure limits. OSHA's PELs set mandatory limits on the amount or concentration of a substance in the air to protect workers against the health effects of certain hazardous chemicals; and OSHA will continue to enforce those mandatory PELs. Since OSHA's adoption of the majority of its PELs more than 40 years ago, new scientific data, industrial experience and developments in technology clearly indicate that in many instances these mandatory limits are not sufficiently protective of workers' health. 

"There is no question that many of OSHA's chemical standards are not adequately protective," Michaels [David Michaels, Assistant Secretary for Labor, Occupational Safety and Health] said. "I advise employers, who want to ensure that their workplaces are safe, to utilize the occupational exposure limits on these annotated tables, since simply complying with OSHA's antiquated PELs will not guarantee that workers will be safe."

The annotated PEL tables provide a side-by-side comparison of OSHA PELs for general industry to the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health PELs, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health recommended exposure limits, and American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienist threshold limit values. They offer an easily accessible reference source for up-to-date workplace exposure limits, which are available at http://www.osha.gov/dsg/annotated-pels/index.html.

Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA's role is to ensure these conditions for America's working men and women by setting and enforcing standards, and providing training, education and assistance. For more information, visit http://www.osha.gov.

The annotated PELs are available for not only gases and vapors but also solids. The annotated PELs are drafted around the PELs published in 29 CFR 1910.1000 and its tables Z-1, Z-2 and Z-3. The Annotated PELs are available at Z-1, Z-2 and Z-3.

The NIOSH RELs and ACGIH TLVs have been in use for many years and are widely respected. However many organizations have not understood the difference between them and the PELs and have relied solely on the OSHA PELs, as the prime means to protect their people, because of the legal status of the latter. These annotated PELs will hopefully encourage employers to use the RELs and TLVs with OSHA's blessing and so create a safer work environment. 




Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Public Citizen Report that Insufficient OSHA Inspections Leave Healthcare Workers Unprotected


On July 17th 2013, Public Citizen, a national non-profit organization released a report titled "Health Care Workers Unprotected. Insufficient Inspections and Standards Leave Safety Risks Unaddressed."  The report cites the a CDC article that shows that Healthcare is the fastest-growing sector of the U.S. economy, employing over 18 million workers. Women represent nearly 80% of the healthcare work force. Health care workers face a wide range of hazards on the job, including needlestick injuries, back injuries, latex allergy, violence, and stress. ... The high rate of injuries among healthcare workers has been discussed before on this blog, especially with regard to chemical exposures.

Cases of nonfatal occupational injury and illness among to healthcare workers are among the highest of any industry sector. By contrast, two of the most hazardous industries, agriculture and construction, are safer today than they were a decade ago.  This at a time when healthcare spending and the number of people employed in healthcare is increasing.

Public Citizen places the blame in OSHA's lack of inspection and lack of suitable ergonomic standards applicable to healthcare and the following statistics show that they have a good point.

Industry
No. Employed
No Injuries
No Fatalities
No. Inspections
Construction
9.1 million
74,950
744
52,179
Manufacturing
14.1 million
127,140
329
19,566
Healthcare and Social Assistance
18.9 million
176,380
141
2,504

The number of inspections in healthcare and social assistance is proportionately much smaller than in either manufacturing or construction. Some of this difference is due to the more severe injuries in manufacturing and construction, but even when comparing the relative rates of fatalities the report says that OSHA conducts fewer than 1/4th as many inspections in health care as in construction in proportion to the number of fatalities.

This blog has also commented previously on the lack of OSHA inspections, due to a lack of resources, even though the revenues from the additional inspections would almost fully reimburse the treasury.

The other point that the Public Citizen report makes is that there are insufficient standards relevant to healthcare, especially ergonomics. This blog has also discussed previously about how it is more difficult for OSHA to promulgate new standards and regulations compared to many other government agencies. If there are not applicable standards available, then OSHA must use the General Duty Clause in order to prosecute unsafe work practices. The additional evidentiary burden makes these prosecutions few and far between.

As Assistant Secretary of Labor David Michaels said "It is unacceptable that the workers who have dedicated their lives to caring for our loved ones when they are sick are the very same workers who face the highest risk of work-related injury and illness."