When to Suspect Asthma is Work-Related
- If asthma symptoms are worse at
work.
- If asthma symptoms are better or improve away from work.
- If a worker develops asthma after beginning a new job.
- New onset asthma in an adult.
- Pre-existing asthma that worsens in an adult's life.
What to do if diagnosed with work-related asthma
The sooner an individual is no longer exposed to the substance at work
causing the asthma, the greater the chance that the asthma symptoms will improve or resolve completely.
Prevention of work-related asthma
- Substitute asthma-causing agents with less hazardous chemicals or substances.
- Keep exposures as low as possible using engineering controls such as
local exhaust ventilation. Monitor exposures regularly.
- Provide Respiratory protection if none of the options above can be done.
- Train workers how to: recognize asthma-causing substances, protect
themselves to minimize exposure, and recognize the signs of breathing problems.
- Set up a medical screening and tracking program to identify employees
with work-related asthma as soon as the disease begins, in order to
reduce the chance of their asthma becoming chronic
or more severe. View the complete screening protocol for workers exposed
to asthma-causing agents.
- Assign any employee who develops asthma to a non-exposed job as soon as they are identified.