Abstract

A retrospective analysis of worker blood lead levels (BLL) was conducted using blood lead data collected by four bridge painting contractors before and after lead exposure. The objective of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of exposure controls in preventing elevated blood lead levels (>25 μg/dl) during bridge painting projects. The contractors selected for the study submitted BLL data for 289 workers representing ten work tasks and 11 bridge painting projects. In total, 713 blood lead levels results were evaluated.The mean blood lead level for all work classifications combined was 10.9 μg/dl at baseline compared with 14.9 μg/dl after two months of exposure and 15.0 μg/dl after four months of exposure. Two months after initial exposure, 29% of the painters and 35% of the laborers had a 10 μg/dl incremental increase or greater in blood lead level. Likewise, 18% of the painters and 26% of the laborers had a blood lead level greater than 25 μg/dl during the same time. The blood lead levels that exceeded the 25 μg/dL threshold ranged from 30μg/dL-63 μg/dL for painters and 26 μg–56 μg/dL for laborers.All work tasks with high-intensity exposure (abrasive blaster/painter, abrasive blaster, painter & laborer) experienced an average blood lead level increase that ranged from 0.2 μg/dl to 8.9 μg/dl two months after initial exposure. Blood lead testing conducted after modified exposure controls (two months after the initial follow-up blood testing) were implemented showed a decrease in average blood lead levels (range −0.14 μg/dl to −2.7 μg/dl) for two high-intensity exposure work tasks. In comparison, the other two high-intensity work tasks had moderate increases (range 1 μg/dl to 2.4 μg/dl). The modified exposure controls included an increase in the air velocity inside of the work containment and an administrative control in the form of additional worker training on lead exposure prevention. The reduction in the 95th percentile (point estimate) BLL exposure profile for each exposure group at the 4-month follow-up blood testing period is associated with modified exposure controls.Ineffective exposure controls were identified through the analysis of worker BLLs. We found two exposure groups (laborer and painter) whose 95th percentile (point estimate) exposure profile was greater than the OSHA construction lead standard's targeted BLL goal (25 μg/dl) during the first two months of exposure. Our research findings provide support for monthly blood lead testing after baseline until blood lead levels are controlled to an acceptable concentration.

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