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Effectiveness of interventions to reduce flour dust exposures in supermarket bakeries in South Africa

Authors :
Baatjies, Roslynn
Meijster, Tim
Heederik, Dick
Sander, Ingrid
Jeebhay, Mohamed F.
LS IRAS EEPI GRA (Gezh.risico-analyse)
Risk Assessment of Toxic and Immunomodulatory Agents
IRAS RATIA-SIB
LS IRAS EEPI GRA (Gezh.risico-analyse)
Risk Assessment of Toxic and Immunomodulatory Agents
IRAS RATIA-SIB
Source :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 71(12), 811. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
BMJ, 2014.

Abstract

Rationale: A recent study of supermarket bakery workers in South Africa demonstrated that 25% of workers were sensitised to flour allergens and 13% had baker's asthma. Evidence on exposure reduction strategies using specifically designed interventions aimed at reducing the risk of baker's asthma is scarce. Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of different control measures to reduce airborne flour dust exposure using a randomised design. Methods: A group-randomised study design was used to assign 30 bakeries of a large supermarket chain store to two intervention groups and a control group, of which 15 bakeries were studied. Full-shift environmental personal samples were used to characterise exposure to flour dust and wheat and rye allergens levels pre-intervention (n=176) and post-intervention (n=208). Results: The overall intervention effect revealed a 50% decrease in mean flour dust, wheat and rye allergen exposure. The reduction in exposure was highest for managers (67%) and bakers (47%), and lowest for counterhands (23%). For bakers, the greatest reduction in flour dust was associated with control measures such as the use of the mixer lid (67%), divider oil (63%) or focused training (54%). However, the greatest reduction (80%) was observed when using a combination of all control measures. Conclusions: A specially designed intervention strategy reduced both flour dust and allergen levels. Best results were observed when combining both engineering controls and training. Further studies will investigate the long-term health impact of these interventions on reducing the disease burden among this group of bakers.

Details

ISSN :
14707926 and 13510711
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....663ce750ffd78b2e22e6547ba26ad88b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/oemed-2013-101971