| Literature DB >> 34935028 |
Christopher Zuidema1, Elena Austin1, Martin A Cohen1, Edward Kasner1, Lilian Liu1, Tania Busch Isaksen1, Ken-Yu Lin2, June Spector1,3, Edmund Seto1.
Abstract
Driven by climate change, wildfires are increasing in frequency, duration, and intensity across the Western United States. Outdoor workers are being exposed to increasing wildfire-related particulate matter and smoke. Recognizing this emerging risk, Washington adopted an emergency rule and is presently engaged in creating a permanent rule to protect outdoor workers from wildfire smoke exposure. While there are growing bodies of literature on the exposure to and health effects of wildfire smoke in the general public and wildland firefighters, there is a gap in knowledge about wildfire smoke exposure among outdoor workers generally and construction workers specifically-a large category of outdoor workers in Washington totaling 200,000 people. Several data sources were linked in this study-including state-collected employment data and national ambient air quality data-to gain insight into the risk of PM2.5 exposure among construction workers and evaluate the impacts of different air quality thresholds that would have triggered a new Washington emergency wildfire smoke rule aimed at protecting workers from high PM2.5 exposure. Results indicate the number of poor air quality days has increased in August and September in recent years. Over the last decade, these months with the greatest potential for particulate matter exposure coincided with an annual peak in construction employment that was typically 9.4-42.7% larger across Washington counties (one county was 75.8%). Lastly, the 'encouraged' threshold of the Washington emergency rule (20.5 μg m-3) would have resulted in 5.5 times more days subject to the wildfire rule on average across all Washington counties compared to its 'required' threshold (55.5 μg m-3), and in 2020, the rule could have created demand for 1.35 million N-95 filtering facepiece respirators among construction workers. These results have important implications for both employers and policy makers as rules are developed. The potential policy implications of wildfire smoke exposure, exposure control strategies, and data gaps that would improve understanding of construction worker exposure to wildfire smoke are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: PM2.5; forest fires; respirator; wildfire smoke protection rule; wildland fire
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34935028 PMCID: PMC9030230 DOI: 10.1093/annweh/wxab115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Work Expo Health ISSN: 2398-7308 Impact factor: 2.779
Figure 1.Monthly counts of Washington State construction workers. Construction of Buildings (NAICS code 236), Heavy and Civil Engineering Construction (NAICS code 237), and Specialty Trade Contractors (NAICS code 238) sum to Construction (NAICS code 23).
Figure 2.Map of Washington State with counties shaded according to construction employment (annual average of 2020 ESD data) and AQS monitor locations (points). (Note: construction employment for Garfield County was 2017 due to data availability).
Summary of the number of construction workers by NAICS code in WA for 2020 (note that table for all NAICS codes available in Supplementary Materials)
| NAICS code | Industry | Potential for outdoor work | Firms | Workers | Percent of two-digit NAICS | Percent of three-digit NAICS | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 | Construction | 26 977 | 199 784 | 100.0 | ||||
| 236 | Construction of buildings | 9478 | 51 636 | 25.8 | 100.0 | |||
| 236 220 | Commercial building construction | Medium | 986 | 18 808 | 9.4 | 36.4 | ||
| 236 115 | New single family general contractors | Medium | 4338 | 14 723 | 7.4 | 28.5 | ||
| 236 118 | Residential remodelers | Medium | 3844 | 11 908 | 6.0 | 23.1 | ||
| Other (NAICS 236116, 236117, 236210) | Medium | 310 | 6198 | 3.0 | 12.0 | |||
| 237 | Heavy and civil engineering construction | 1084 | 20 576 | 10.3 | 100.0 | |||
| 237 310 | Highway, street, and bridge construction | High | 239 | 6550 | 3.3 | 31.8 | ||
| 237 110 | Water and sewer system construction | High | 320 | 4205 | 2.1 | 20.4 | ||
| 237 130 | Power and communication system construction | High | 197 | 4195 | 2.1 | 20.4 | ||
| Other (NAICS 237120, 237210, 237990) | High | 329 | 5626 | 2.8 | 27.3 | |||
| 238 | Specialty trade contractors | 16 416 | 127 573 | 63.9 | 100.0 | |||
| 238 212 | Nonresidential electrical contractors | Medium | 677 | 15 418 | 7.7 | 12.1 | ||
| 238 222 | Nonresidential plumbing and HVAC contractors | Medium | 460 | 14 076 | 7.0 | 11.0 | ||
| 238 221 | Residential plumbing and HVAC contractors | Medium | 1600 | 11 992 | 6.0 | 9.4 | ||
| Other (NAICS codes 238211, 238311, 238321, 238911, 238912, 238161, 238312, 238111, 238351, 238131, 238992, 238292, 238991, 238322, 238162, 238112, 238171, 238122, 238331, 238152, 238341, 238142, 238392, 238352, 238141, 238151, 238192, 238391, 238132, 238332, 238121, 238291, 238191, 238172, 238342) | Mixed | 13 684 | 86 090 | 43.0 | 67.5 |
Figure 3.Daily PM2.5 concentrations and average monthly percent difference in construction workers from the month with the lowest number of workers for King, Spokane, and Yakima, WA counties; 2011–2020. Dashed lines indicate WA’s ‘encouraged’ and ‘required’ PM2.5 thresholds (20.4 and 55.5 µg m−3, respectively). (Note: axes were restricted, omitting 2 and 3 data points above 300 µg m−3 for Spokane and Yakima Counties, respectively).
Figure 4.Average number of days per month with AQI worse than ‘good’ and average monthly percent difference in construction workers from the month with the lowest number of workers for King, Spokane, and Yakima, WA counties; 2011–2020.
Figure 5.Estimated exposure to wildfire smoke among WA construction workers according to various PM2.5 thresholds (20.5, 35, and 55.5 µg m−3 PM2.5 correspond to the WA ‘encouraged’ threshold, US EPA NAAQS, and the WA ‘required’ threshold, respectively).