Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Lucion Group
1st February, 2019
(Data extracted from Hodgson JT and Darnton A 2000)
This means that children are far more likely to contract mesothelioma within their lifetime than adults.
Mesothelioma death rates are currently highlighted in the media by the deaths of teachers and nurses who have been working within public buildings across a number of years that have been manufactured using asbestos. We have yet to see the effect that this has upon children who attend schools from the ages of 4/5 where the risk factor of developing mesothelioma during their lifetime is over 5 times more likely than that of the average teacher.
“The level of 0.01f/ml should be taken only as a transient indication of site cleanliness, in conjunction with visual inspection, and not as an acceptable permanent environmental level.” - SC CAWR 2006 Work with materials containing asbestos ACOP para 17 p68This means that the current clearance level indicator used during asbestos air monitoring testing is not safe. The clearance level indicator used in the UK has not been revised in 30 years despite extensive research, published white papers/articles and increase in mesothelioma cases.
“[…]insufficiently sensitive to observe the vast majority of asbestos fibres in a given sample of air.” - Charles Pickles, Why The UK Needs Tighter Asbestos Controls White Paper, 2018, page 4PCM/PCOM testing is limited in its level of asbestos fibre detection (0.01 f/cm3) compared to other, currently available testing methods. Other European nations who have a lower asbestos to mesothelioma death ratio than the UK, are currently using more powerful technologies to detect airborne asbestos fibres in the air. Such technologies as Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), are currently available for businesses within the UK to use. However, they omit to do so favouring the commonly cheaper option of PCM/PCOM (which only meets the current clearance level indicator) despite the available knowledge and research clarifying that the current clearance level indicator of 0.01 f/ml is ineffective at protecting individuals from asbestos exposures.
“The UK was once the world’s largest importer of asbestos and its incorporation in commonly used building materials throughout the 1950s and 1960s means that it remains in many shops, houses, hospitals, offices and schools that are still in use today.” - Charles Pickles, Why The UK Needs Tighter Asbestos Controls, page 21The correlation of the UK historically being the highest importer of asbestos in Europe and the UK having the highest death rate from mesothelioma demonstrates that the current actions and regulations in place are insufficient to protect the individuals with asbestos affected buildings.
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