Increase Asbestos Consciousness And Sinking Disclosure Peril:
The
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) estimate that there are still some four
million properties around the UK, which are likely to contain hidden asbestos
materials, and often encountered in a friable (fragile and disintegrating)
condition. Any attempt to remove can result in fibers becoming airborne and
inhaled by anyone in close proximity, from home owner or tenant, company
employee to public visitors, as well as building and demolition workers.
Health support by lung cancer:
Health support by lung cancer:
It
is frequently reported that still far too many firms seem to possess little or
no asbestos awareness or training to correctly deal with the potential health
risks. To minimize time and costs, the health and safety procedures are often
simply ignored when existing building materials found to contain asbestos
(ACMs) are dismantled and disposed of alongside standard building waste.
The
Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012, which came into force on the 6th April,
updates previous asbestos regulations by implementing EU Directive 2009/148/EC
and targets changes at around three quarters of a million workers in companies
involved with non-licensable asbestos work. From now on, the
"Non-Licensable" category of asbestos work will be divided into two
with an additional category, to be known as "Modifiable Non-Licensable
Work" (NNLW).
According
to the HSE, “All non-licensed work is required to be carried out with the
appropriate controls in place. Employers will also have an obligation for modifiable
non-licensed work (NNLW)", which means they must:
- Notify work with asbestos to the relevant enforcing authority.
- Ensure medical examinations are carried out.
- Maintain registers of work (health records).
The
process involves specifying whether a type of asbestos work is either
licensable, NNLW or non-licensed work in each case. To do this, a risk
assessment must be carried out first to identify the type of
asbestos-containing material (ACM) and an evaluation of its condition.
If
the work is exempt from the need for a license, it must be then determined if
it is modifiable non-licensed work or just non-licensed work. The HSE advise
that the key factors to consider are based on the type of work planned, whether
maintenance, removal, encapsulation, or air monitoring and the collection and
analysis of asbestos samples.
Identifying
asbestos type is crucial. Although the most toxic forms were banned from use in
1985, white chrysotile asbestos fibers continued to be incorporated into a
variety of building materials, including insulation wallboard (AIB), cement
roofing, surface coatings and sprayed insulation, tiles and soffits, infill and
adhesive tapes, etc. An import ban on chrysotile in 1999 was followed by a full
ban in 2005. However, it must be assumed that any property built or renovated
at any time until the end of the twentieth century has to be suspected of
containing asbestos material.
Asbestos
found in a fragile, friable condition is particularly prone to release fibers
and is liable to be designated NNLW while work which disturbs the least friable
materials e.g. asbestos cement can normally be treated as non-licensed work.
Encapsulated asbestos, such as cement, paint or plastic, which are considered
to be firmly bonded in a matrix, are more likely to be found in good condition
and can usually be treated as non-licensed work.
The
ever present risk is the disturbance and breathing in of asbestos fibers. Once
ingested they embed in the lung linings and can eventually cause asbestosis
disease or form the deadly incurable tumors of Mesothelioma cancer.
A
long gestation period of between 15 to 50 years is known to elapse before the
first asbestosis symptoms appear, by which time, the disease may have spread to
adjacent tissues or organs. A patient's survival rate after a conformed
diagnosis can be less than 6 months.
Under
the requirements of the NNLW, the HSE requires “brief written records should be
kept of non-licensed work, which has to be notified, e.g. copy of the
notification with a list of workers present on-site, plus the level of likely
exposure of those workers to asbestos".
By
April 2015, each and every worker who is exposed to asbestos must be under
medical "surveillance" every three years. The employer must maintain
a register for each worker, which records the type and duration of work carried
out with asbestos and is to be retained for at least 40 years along with copies
of all medical reports.
The
HSE state that “Workers who are already under health surveillance for licensed work
need not have another medical examination for non-licensed work but medicals
for modifiable non-licensed work are not acceptable for those doing licensed
work".
With
more than 1.8 million people annually exposed each year to asbestos and at
least 2,000 cases of Mesothelioma diagnosed annually, the new Regulations are
an attempt to reduce disregard for health and safety on property renovations
when there is still a potential hazard from exposure to asbestos.
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