| Literature DB >> 24482607 |
P A Schulte1, C L Geraci1, V Murashov1, E D Kuempel1, R D Zumwalde1, V Castranova1, M D Hoover1, L Hodson1, K F Martinez2.
Abstract
Organizations around the world have called for the responsible development of nanotechnology. The goals of this approach are to emphasize the importance of considering and controlling the potential adverse impacts of nanotechnology in order to develop its capabilities and benefits. A primary area of concern is the potential adverse impact on workers, since they are the first people in society who are exposed to the potential hazards of nanotechnology. Occupational safety and health criteria for defining what constitutes responsible development of nanotechnology are needed. This article presents five criterion actions that should be practiced by decision-makers at the business and societal levels-if nanotechnology is to be developed responsibly. These include (1) anticipate, identify, and track potentially hazardous nanomaterials in the workplace; (2) assess workers' exposures to nanomaterials; (3) assess and communicate hazards and risks to workers; (4) manage occupational safety and health risks; and (5) foster the safe development of nanotechnology and realization of its societal and commercial benefits. All these criteria are necessary for responsible development to occur. Since it is early in the commercialization of nanotechnology, there are still many unknowns and concerns about nanomaterials. Therefore, it is prudent to treat them as potentially hazardous until sufficient toxicology, and exposure data are gathered for nanomaterial-specific hazard and risk assessments. In this emergent period, it is necessary to be clear about the extent of uncertainty and the need for prudent actions.Entities:
Keywords: Environmental and health effects; Ethics; Regulation; Risk assessment; Risk management; Toxicology
Year: 2013 PMID: 24482607 PMCID: PMC3890581 DOI: 10.1007/s11051-013-2153-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nanopart Res ISSN: 1388-0764 Impact factor: 2.253
Occupational safety and health criteria that demonstrate responsible development of nanotechnology
| Criteria | Business enterprise responsibility | Societal responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| Anticipate, identify, and track potentially hazardous nanomaterials in the workplace | Identify nanomaterials in the workplace Conduct toxicologic research Take precautionary (prudent) approaches | Issue anticipatory guidance Conduct toxicologic research Issue hazard guidance and control |
| Assess workers' exposures to nanomaterials | Measure exposure | Provide guidance on metrics, sampling methods, and analysis |
| Assess and communicate hazards and risks to workers | Conduct hazard and risk assessments Communicate hazard and risk information to workers Train workers in safe handling techniques | Conduct hazard and risk assessments, including quantitative estimates Communicate risk information to employers, unions, workers, other agencies, and the public |
| Manage occupational safety and health risks | Manage workplace risks from nanomaterials Control exposures Monitor workers exposure and health | Include many partners to develop governance strategies Issue guidance on workplace risk management OELs (occupational exposure limits) Engineering controls and PPE (personal protective equipment) Medical surveillance |
| Foster the safe development of nanotechnology and the realization of societal and commercial benefits | Protect workers from any harm from nanomaterials Convey the degree of uncertainty known about risks Acknowledge hazards Support precautionary approaches Document the effectiveness of controls | Convey the degree of certainty about hazards and risks Conduct research to address uncertainties Demonstrate the effectiveness of controls Address relationship between occupational and environmental hazards Work globally Support education and scientific literacy |
Fig. 1Interrelation of criteria for responsible development of nanotechnology
Relationship between occupational safety and health criteria for responsible development of nanotechnology
| Relationshipa | Implications | |
|---|---|---|
| 1.b | HI ↔ EA | Provides priorities for exposure assessment |
| 2. | EA ↔ RA | Component factor in risk assessment provides priorities for exposure assessment |
| 3. | RA ↔ RM | Informs risk management |
| 4. | RM ↔ FB | Minimizes worker risks and enhances societal acceptance |
| 5. | HI ↔ RA | Component factor in risk assessment; provides priorities for toxicology study |
| 6. | HI ↔ RM | Triggers risk management |
| 7. | HI ↔ FB | Identifying worker hazards useful for identifying consumer and environmental hazards |
| 8. | EA ↔ RM | Assessing exposures is critical in controlling them |
| 9. | EA ↔ FB | Identifying risk of exposures to workers provides information needed for effective risk management |
| 10. | RA ↔ FB | True depiction of risks and risk management decisions to minimize risk enhances societal acceptance |
a HI hazard identification (anticipate, identify and track potentially hazardous nanomaterials in the workplace), EA exposure assessment (assess workers exposures to nanomaterial), RA risk assessment (assess and communicate hazards and risks to workers), RM risk management (manage occupational safety and health risks), FB foster benefits (foster the safe development of nanotechnology and the realization of societal and commercial benefits)
bNumber pertains to linkages in Fig. 1
Overarching principles to guide research, guidance, legislation, and practice involving nanotechnology
| The health of workers should not be harmed by their work with nanomaterials |
| Globally harmonized definitions for engineered nanomaterials are needed |
| Transparency and traceability are essential to inform workers and employers if engineered nanomaterials are used in workplaces and where exposure may occur |
| Hazard and risk assessments must be performed to inform exposure control decisions for nanomaterials to which workers may be exposed |
| Emerging and enabling nanotechnology should apply “safe by design” principles to materials and processes to engineer out the hazardous or toxic potentials of new engineered nanomaterials as a best practice to protect workers and the environment |
| Early warning systems need to be developed to monitor workers’ health |
| Well-established industrial hygiene practices are appropriate to address nanotechnology hazards and risks |
| If occupational exposure limit values are not available for specific nanomaterials, a precautionary approach should be applied |
| Harmonized exposure assessment measurements and control strategies need to be developed for nanomaterial processes |
| Workers have the right to participate in developing risk management practices involving nanomaterials in the workplace |
Adapted from the draft US–EU 7th joint conference on occupational safety and health, topic 1: nanotechnology at the workplace, Brussels, 11–13 July 2012. http://www.euusosh.org/
Fig. 2Pathways for responsible development of nanotechnology