Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Western States Division, P.O. Box 25226, Denver, CO 80225-0226, United States.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Field Studies and Engineering, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, 1090 Tusculum Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45226, United States.
Ann Work Expo Health. 2023 Sep 21;67(8):1011-1017. doi: 10.1093/annweh/wxad046.
Wildland firefighters (WFFs) are exposed to many inhalation hazards working in the wildland fire environment. To assess occupational exposures and acute and subacute health effects among WFFs, the wildland firefighter exposure and health effects study collected data for a 2-year repeated measures study. This manuscript describes the exposure assessment from one Interagency Hotshot Crew (N = 19) conducted at a wildfire incident. Exposures to benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene isomers, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and naphthalene were measured through personal air sampling each work shift. Biological monitoring was done for creatinine-adjusted levoglucosan in urine pre- and post-shift. For 3 days sampling at the wildfire incident, benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylene isomers (m and p, and o) exposure was highest on day 1 (geometric mean [GM] = 0.015, 0.042, 0.10, 0.42, and 0.15 ppm, respectively) when WFFs were not exposed to smoke but used chainsaws to remove vegetation and prepare fire suppression breaks. Exposure to formaldehyde and acetaldehyde was highest on day 2 (GM = 0.03 and 0.036 ppm, respectively) when the WFFs conducted a firing operation and were directly exposed to wildfire smoke. The greatest difference of pre- and post-shift levoglucosan concentrations were observed on day 3 (pre-shift: 9.7 and post-shift: 47 μg/mg creatinine) after WFFs conducted mop up (returned to partially burned area to extinguish any smoldering vegetation). Overall, 65% of paired samples (across all sample days) showed a post-shift increase in urinary levoglucosan and 5 firefighters were exposed to benzene at concentrations at or above the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) recommended exposure limit. Our findings further demonstrate that exposure to inhalation hazards is one of many risks that wildland firefighters experience while suppressing wildfires.
野外消防员(WFFs)在野外火灾环境中工作时会接触到许多吸入性危害。为了评估 WFFs 的职业暴露情况以及急性和亚急性健康影响,野外消防员暴露和健康影响研究收集了为期 2 年的重复测量研究数据。本文描述了在一次野外大火事件中对一个跨机构精英消防队(N = 19)进行的暴露评估。通过每个班次的个人空气采样来测量苯、甲苯、乙苯、二甲苯异构体、甲醛、乙醛和萘的暴露情况。在轮班前后对尿液中的肌酐调整左旋葡聚糖进行生物监测。在野外火灾事件的 3 天采样中,当 WFFs 没有接触烟雾但使用链锯清除植被和准备灭火隔离带时,苯、甲苯、乙苯、二甲苯异构体(m 和 p,以及 o)的暴露在第 1 天最高(几何平均值 [GM] = 0.015、0.042、0.10、0.42 和 0.15 ppm)。当 WFFs 进行点火作业并直接接触野火烟雾时,甲醛和乙醛的暴露在第 2 天最高(GM = 0.03 和 0.036 ppm)。在 WFFs 进行清理(返回部分燃烧区域扑灭任何闷烧的植被)后,第 3 天(轮班前:9.7 μg/mg 肌酐,轮班后:47 μg/mg 肌酐)观察到尿液左旋葡聚糖的前后差值最大。总体而言,在所有采样日中,65%的配对样本(尿液左旋葡聚糖)显示轮班后增加,5 名消防员的苯暴露浓度达到或超过了国家职业安全与健康研究所(NIOSH)推荐的暴露限值。我们的研究结果进一步表明,接触吸入性危害是野外消防员扑灭野火时面临的众多风险之一。