Friday, March 1, 2013

Lower Asthma Incidence Among Polyurethane Foam Manufacturing Workers, Study Shows


An industry report of the foam manufacturing plant health and safety records found incidents of occupational asthma to be lower in flexible polyurethane foam plants than among the general adult population. The report, featured in a paper entitled, “A Survey of the Incidence of Occupational Asthma among Flexible Polyurethane Foam Slabstock Plants,” combines 24 years of data and surveys and suggests that that plant workers were “well-protected from chemical exposure by modern chemical exposure control technologies and training.”

The paper, sponsored by the Polyurethane Foam Association and analyzed by Washington, D.C. based law firm, McIntyre & Lemon, PLLC, suggests numerous workplace controls, such as aggressive ventilation systems, personal protection equipment (PPE), and risk-management training, have contributed a very low percentage of self-reported asthma amongst workers.

Copies of a presentation presented at a Polyurethane Foam Association Technical Program are available on the Polyurethane Foam Association website in the literature section (under technical proceedings).