Asbestos Awareness Presentation

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This presentation is for

information purposes
ONLY.
Asbestos
Awareness
Training
Presented by: Phataladi Projects
Asbestos Awareness Training covers:

• Regulation information on asbestos


• Background information on asbestos
• Location of ACM in the buildings
• Health effects of asbestos
• Worker protection programs
• Recognition of ACM damage and
deterioration
• The O&M program for buildings
• Proper response to fiber release
Why are we doing this?
• Asbestos is:
• Potentially hazardous to health
• Seems like its everywhere
• Unpredictable
• Laws and Regulations
Asbestos Awareness
This module was prepared with information
provided by:
• Department of Labour
• Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA)
Asbestos Awareness - Definitions
• Asbestos: chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite, tremolite,
anthophyllite, actinolite, and any of these minerals
that have been chemically altered; includes PACM
• ACM: "asbestos-containing material," any material
containing > 1% asbestos
• PACM: "presumed asbestos-containing material"
• Surfacing Material: material that is sprayed, troweled-
on, or otherwise applied to surfaces
• Thermal System Insulation (TSI): ACM applied to
pipes, fittings, boilers, breeching, tanks, ducts or
other structural components to prevent heat loss or
gain
Who regulates asbestos?
• Environmental Protection Agency
• National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants (NESHAPs)
• Asbestos Hazard Emergency Response Act
(AHERA)
• Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
• Occupational Health and Safety
Administration
• 29 CFR 1910.1001 – General Industry Standard
• 29 CFR 1926.1101 - Construction Standard
• State and Local Authorities
Who regulates asbestos?
• OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1001
• The employer shall also provide, at no cost to employees
who perform housekeeping operations in an area which
contains ACM or PACM, an asbestos awareness training
course, which shall at a minimum contain the following
elements: health effects of asbestos, locations of ACM and
PACM in the building/facility, recognition of ACM and PACM
damage and deterioration, requirements in this standard
relating to housekeeping, and proper response to fiber
release episodes, to all employees who perform
housekeeping work in areas where ACM and/or PACM is
present. Each such employee shall be so trained at least
once a year.
Who regulates asbestos?
• OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1101
• Class I: Asbestos work activities involving removal of TSI
and surfacing ACM and PACM
• Class II: Asbestos work activates involving the removal of
ACM which is not TSI or surfacing material. This includes put
is not limited to, the removal of asbestos wall board, floor
tile, sheet rock, shingles, and mastics.
• Class III: Asbestos work activates involving maintenance
and custodial where ACM including TSI is likely to be
disturbed.
• Class IV: Asbestos work activates involving maintenance
and custodial activities to clean up waste and debris
containing ACM and PACM.
EPA Bans on Asbestos
• NESHAP
• 1973 banned spray applied surfacing fireproofing /
insulation
• 1975 banned wet applied and pre-formed pipe
insulation
• 1978 banned sprayed applied surfacing
fireproofing for decorative purposes
EPA Bans on Asbestos
• TSCA
• In 1989 EPA issue the “Asbestos Ban and Phase
Out Rule”
• The majority of the original ban was over ruled by
the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1991.
• Six materials were still banned:
• Corrugated paper
• Rollboard
• Commercial paper
• Specialty paper
• Floor felt
• NEW USES OF ASBESTOS

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EPA Bans on Asbestos
• TSCA – Material Not banned
• Asbestos-cement Corrugated Sheet, Asbestos-
cement Flat Sheet, Asbestos Clothing, Pipeline
Wrap, Roofing felt, Vinyl-asbestos Floor Tile,
Asbestos-cement Shingles, Clutch Facing,
Frication Material, Disc Brake Pads, Drum Brake
Linings, Gaskets, Non-roof Coatings, Roof
Coatings, Millboard, Asbestos Cement Pipe,
Automatic Transmission Components, Brake
Blocks
EPA Bans on Asbestos
What is Asbestos?

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What is asbestos?
• The fire resistance properties of asbestos
have been known since ancient times.
• The Greeks used asbestos in lamp wicks.
• It is said that Charlemagne's tablecloth (which
according to legend, he threw in a fire to
clean) was made of asbestos.
• Asbestos was used in fabrics such as
Egyptian burial cloths.

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What Is Asbestos
• Asbestos is a naturally occurring mineral
fiber.
• There are 6 types divided into 2 main groups.
• All asbestos groups are complex silicates.
• Asbestos is essentially inert.

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Asbestos Groups:
• The serpentine group
• Characterized by asbestos fibers which form
curly structures or appear coiled when viewed
in their natural state
• There is only one type of asbestos under the
group heading – Chrysotile
• Chrysotile makes up ~95% of the asbestos
found in building products.

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Chrysotile Asbestos

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Chrysotile Asbestos

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Asbestos Groups :

• The Amphibole group of asbestos is


characterized by families of asbestos fibers
which are thin and straight
• This group includes the following:
• Amosite (brown asbestos)
• Crocidolite (blue asbestos)
• Anthophyllite
• Actinolite
• Tremolite

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Chyrsotile vs. Amphioble

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What is Asbestos?
All types of asbestos
tend to break into very
tiny fibers.
These individual fibers
are so small they must
be identified using a
microscope.
Some fibers may be
Asbestos fibers are identified by
using a microscope up to 700 times
smaller than a human
hair.
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What is Asbestos?
Because asbestos
fibers are so small,
once released into the
air, they may stay
suspended there for
hours or even days.

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What is Asbestos?

• Asbestos fibers are virtually indestructible.


• They are resistant to chemicals and heat, and they
are very stable in the environment.
• They do not evaporate into air or dissolve in water,
and they are not broken down over time.
• Asbestos is probably the best insulator known to
man. Because asbestos has so many useful
properties, it has been used in over 3,000 different
products.

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What is Asbestos?
• For OSHA and most other regulations a
material must contain greater than 1%
asbestos to be categorized as Asbestos
Containing Material (ACM)
• In addition materials can be Presumed
Asbestos Containing Materials (PACM)
• If a material is PACM it is subject to all
regulations that apply to ACM

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Where is Asbestos
Found?

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Where is Asbestos Found?

Asbestos may be found in many different products


and many different places. Examples of products that
might contain asbestos are:
• Sprayed-on fire proofing and insulation in buildings
• Insulation for pipes and boilers
• Wall and ceiling insulation
• Ceiling tiles
• Floor tiles
• Putties, caulks, and cements (such as in chemical carrying
cement pipes)
• Plaster material
• Mastic material (pipe, HVAC, sink)

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Where is Asbestos Found?

• Roofing shingles
• Siding shingles on old residential buildings
• Wall and ceiling texture in older buildings and homes
• Joint compound in older buildings and homes
• Brake linings and clutch pads
• Fire Curtains
• Lab Bench top Surfaces
• Fire blankets
• Fire doors
• Gaskets
• Roof Coating

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Where is Asbestos Found?

• The Usual Suspects:


• Sprayed-on insulation in locations such as various
mechanical rooms, steel reinforcing beams, and
some ceilings in older buildings
• Most 9“ x 9” floor tiles in buildings built prior to
1981
• Insulation around pipes and boilers
• Interiors of fire doors

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Where is Asbestos?
• Building areas that
have asbestos
containing materials
in them will have
notices posted near
the entrances,
frequently near the
fire alarm panel.

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Where is Asbestos?
• Pipe and boiler
insulation that
contains asbestos
will be labeled with
identifying stickers
and placards.

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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Where is Asbestos?

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When is Asbestos
Dangerous?

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?
• The most common way
for asbestos fibers to
enter the body is
through inhalation.

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?

• ACM is not generally considered to be harmful


unless it is releasing dust or fibers into the air where
the fibers can be inhaled.

• Many of the fibers will become trapped in the mucous


membranes of the nose and throat where they can
then be removed, but some may pass deep into the
lungs.

• Once they are trapped in the lungs, the fibers can


cause health problems.

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?
• Asbestos is hazardous when
it is friable and is disturbed in
such a nature that it releases
fibers.
• The term "friable" means that
the asbestos is easily
crumbled by hand, releasing
fibers into the air.
• Asbestos floor tile is non-
friable.
• Asbestos ceiling tile is friable

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?

• Asbestos-containing ceiling tiles, floor tiles,


undamaged laboratory cabinet tops,
shingles, fire doors, siding shingles, etc. will
not release asbestos fibers unless they
are disturbed or damaged in some way.
• If an asbestos ceiling tile is drilled or broken,
for example, it may release fibers into the
air. If it is left alone and not disturbed, it will
not release fibers and doesn’t pose a health
risk.
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When is Asbestos Dangerous?
• Asbestos pipe and
boiler insulation does
not present a hazard
unless the protective
canvas covering is cut
or damaged in such a
way that the asbestos
underneath is exposed
to the air.

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?

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When is Asbestos Dangerous?

• Damage and deterioration will increase the


likelihood of disturbance of friable ACM, and
could result in a fiber release.
• Water damage, continual vibration, aging,
and physical impact such as drilling,
grinding, buffing, cutting, sawing, or
striking can break the materials down
making fiber release more likely.

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Health Effects

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Health Effects
• A Quick Review of the
Respiratory System
• Consists of ever smaller
tubes
• Trachea
• Primary bronchi
• Secondary bronchi
• Tertiary Bronchi
• Gas exchange bronchi
• Alveoli

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Health Effects

• Because it is so hard to destroy asbestos


fibers, the body cannot break them down or
remove them once they are lodged in lung
or body tissues. They remain in place where
they can cause disease.
• There are three primary diseases associated
with asbestos exposure:
• Asbestosis
• Lung Cancer
• Mesothelioma
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Asbestosis
• Asbestosis is a serious, chronic, non-
cancerous respiratory disease. Inhaled
asbestos fibers aggravate lung tissues,
which cause them to scar.
• Scar tissue is not able to transfer oxygen
therefore as scaring increases lung function
decreases.
• Symptoms of asbestosis include shortness of
breath and a dry crackling sound in the lungs
while inhaling. In its advanced stages, the
disease may cause cardiac failure because it
is so difficult to breath.

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Asbestosis
• There is no effective treatment for asbestosis; the
disease is usually disabling and can cause death.
• The risk of asbestosis is minimal for those who do
not work with asbestos; the disease is rarely caused
by neighborhood or family exposure.
• Typical latency period is approximately 15-30 years

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Asbestosis
• Smoking and Asbestos
• Smoking temporarily paralyzes the ciliated cells of
the trachea and bronchi
• These ciliated cells line the trachea and bronchi
walls and provide an escalator-like action.
• This is a mechanism designed to remove particles
from the lungs and deposit them into the digestive
system where they are passed.
• As smokers paralyze these cells more particles
can be deposited into the deeper portions of the
lung, increasing the risk of asbestosis

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Lung Cancer
• Lung cancer causes the largest number of deaths
related to asbestos exposure.
• The incidence of lung cancer in people who are
directly involved in the mining, milling,
manufacturing and use of asbestos and its products
is much higher than in the general population.
• The most common symptoms of lung cancer are
coughing and a change in breathing. Other
symptoms include shortness of breath, persistent
chest pains, hoarseness, and anemia.

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Lung Cancer

• People who have been exposed to asbestos and


are also exposed to some other carcinogen -- such
as cigarette smoke -- have a significantly greater
risk of developing lung cancer than people who
have only been exposed to asbestos.
• One study found that asbestos workers who smoke
are about 90 times more likely to develop lung
cancer than people who neither smoke nor have
been exposed to asbestos.
• Smoking has a synergistic effect with asbestos
exposure

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Mesothelioma

• Mesothelioma is a rare form of cancer that most


often occurs in the thin membrane lining of the
lungs, chest, abdomen, and (rarely) heart.
• About 200 cases are diagnosed each year in the
United States.
• Virtually all cases of mesothelioma are linked with
asbestos exposure.
• Approximately 2 percent of all miners and textile
workers who work with asbestos contract
mesothelioma.
• Mesothelioma has an approximate latency period of
30-40 years.

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Determining Factors
for Disease

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Determining Factors

Main factors in determining your likelihood of


developing asbestos related diseases are:

1. The amount and duration of exposure - the


more you are exposed to asbestos and the more
fibers that enter your body, the more likely you are
to develop asbestos related problems. While there
is no "safe level" of asbestos exposure, people
who are exposed more frequently over a long
period of time are at higher risk.

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Determining Factors

2. Whether or not you smoke - if you smoke and


you have been exposed to asbestos, you are far
more likely to develop lung cancer than someone
who does not smoke and who has not been
exposed to asbestos.

If you work with asbestos or have been exposed to


it, the first thing you should do to reduce your
chances of developing cancer is to stop smoking.

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Determining Factors

Organizations that may offer programs,


support, or information to help people stop
smoking are:
• National Cancer Institute (1-800-4-CANCER)
• American Heart Association (1-800-242-8721)
• American Lung Association (1-800-586-4872)

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How to Avoid
Asbestos Exposure

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How to Avoid Exposure

• In order to avoid being exposed to


asbestos, you must be aware of the
locations it is likely to be found.
• If you do not know whether something is
asbestos or not and it fits the suspect
material category, assume that it is until it
is verified otherwise.
• Remember that you cannot tell if floor or
ceiling tiles contain asbestos just by looking
at them. Department of Health and Human
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How to Avoid Exposure

• The Division of Occupational Health and


Safety has a contractor that can take
samples from materials in order to
determine whether or not they contain
asbestos. If you would like to have materials
analyzed or tested for asbestos, please
contact DOHS (301-496-3457).
• Never try to take a sample yourself unless
you have been trained to do so.

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How to Avoid Exposure
• Drill
Never… • Hammer
• Cut
• Saw
• Break
• Damage ...any asbestos-
• Move containing materials
• Disturb or suspected
materials. This could
render the material
Friable.

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How to Avoid Exposure
• The NIH has surveyed all campus buildings
for the presence of asbestos.
• The NIH also has an Operations and
Maintenance (O&M) plan established.
• If you need to do work that might involve
asbestos (replacing ceiling tiles, repairing
insulated pipelines, drilling into floor tiles
etc.), check with DOHS to find out how the
work can be done safely.

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How to Avoid Exposure

• For example, before drilling into any floor


tiles to perform maintenance work, it will be
necessary to ensure they do not contain
asbestos.

• If they do contain asbestos, special work


practices will need to be taken to prevent
rendering the ACM friable during work.

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Housekeeping & Asbestos
• Housekeepers and custodians
should never sand or dry buff
asbestos containing floor tiles,
and only wet stripping methods
should be used during stripping
operations.
• If abrasion pads are required
they should be low abrasion
pads, and should be used at
speeds below 300 RPM.

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Asbestos Spills

• It is important to report any damaged asbestos-


containing materials to DOHS and your
supervisor immediately.
• If, for example, you discover some sprayed-on
asbestos insulation has been knocked off of a
ceiling or wall, this would be considered a "spill."
• As such it would need to be cleaned up immediately
by asbestos abatement workers.

• Do not attempt to clean up spills


yourself!
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Asbestos Spills

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Avoiding Exposure

By knowing where
asbestos is likely to be
located and then taking
measures not to disturb
it, you will protect
yourself and others from
exposure to this
hazardous substance.

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Occupational Medical Services
• If at any time you feel that you have been
exposed to damaged or disturbed, friable
ACM, notify your supervisor, contact DOHS
and visit OMS to document the exposure.
• OMS and DOHS will investigate the potential
exposure to determine if additional medical
and/or environmental monitoring is required.
• OMS is located at
Building 10
6th Floor Room 6C306

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Important Contact Information
• Division of Occupational Health and Safety
• Ph. 301-496-3457
• Occupational Medical Services
• Ph. 301-496-4411

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