A new study has found strong evidence for a link between cleaning
jobs and risk of developing asthma. Researchers at Imperial College
London tracked the occurrence of asthma in a group of 9,488 people born
in Britain in 1958.
Not including those who had asthma as children, nine per cent
developed asthma by age 42. Risks in the workplace were responsible for
one in six cases of adult onset asthma – even more than the one in nine
cases attributed to smoking, according to the analysis.
There are many occupations that are thought to cause asthma. In this
study, 18 occupations were clearly linked with asthma risk, four of
which were cleaning jobs and a further three of which were likely to
involve exposure to cleaning products.
Farmers, hairdressers, and printing workers were also found to have
increased risk, as previous studies have reported. Farmers were
approximately four times more likely to develop asthma as an adult than
office workers.
Besides cleaning products, flour, enzymes, metals, and textiles were
among materials in the workplace identified in the study as being linked
to asthma risk.
The study identified 18 occupations that are clearly linked with
asthma risk, but there are others that did not show up in analysis,
mainly because they are relatively uncommon. Occupational asthma is
widely under-recognised by employers, employees and healthcare
professionals. Raising awareness that this is an almost entirely
preventable disease would be a major step in reducing its incidence.
The study, published in the journal Thorax, was funded by Asthma UK and the Colt Foundation.
The research has highlighted a new group of people, specifically
those working in occupations related to cleaning, such as cleaners or
home-based personal care workers, who may have developed adult onset
asthma due to exposure to chemicals they work with on a daily basis.
Anyone who works in the industries highlighted in the study and who
have experienced breathing problems are urged to discuss this with their
doctors while healthcare professionals are urged to make sure they
consider possible occupational causes in adult onset asthma and tailor
their advice to people with asthma accordingly.
Sunday, 27 January 2013
Evidence for a link between cleaning jobs and risk of developing asthma.
21:34
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