The Exponent Telegram (17.10.2017) Preventing and understanding respiratory diseases, especially those faced by coal miners, is one of the core missions of the National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, Respiratory Health facility in Morgantown. A part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NIOSH has facilities across the country. The one in Morgantown, next door to Ruby Memorial Hospital, opened in 1996. One of the facility’s four divisions is dedicated to respiratory health research and implementing new discoveries to the workplace.
reventing and understanding respiratory diseases, especially those faced by coal miners, is one of the core missions of the National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, Respiratory Health facility in Morgantown.
A part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, NIOSH has facilities across the country. The one in Morgantown, next door to Ruby Memorial Hospital, opened in 1996. One of the facility’s four divisions is dedicated to respiratory health research and implementing new discoveries to the workplace.
“Our focus is on improving workers’ respiratory health by preventing occupational respiratory disease and doing what we can to improve workers’ respiratory health,” Respiratory Health Division Directory David Weissman said. “There’s a lot of work-related to respiratory disease in the country. By our estimates, there are probably at least 2,000,000 people that have work-related asthma.”
Among the tools at the division’s disposal are two Mobile Occupational Safety and Health Units. The trucks are packed with specialized medical screening capabilities that travel to work sites, providing chest X-rays and breathing tests for miners to check for black lung.
Cara Halldin, a team lead on one of these trucks, said the service is provided completely free to miners. She said these services are guaranteed to them by the Federal Coal Mine and Health Safety Act of 1969. This act mandates mining companies provide these clinical services to miners.
“In the event a miner doesn’t go, we provide this as a supplement. This allows us to do outreach,” Halldin said, adding that while mining companies are required to provide those services, the miners aren’t required to use them, and many of them don’t.
This, she said, is often because of distance between the mine, the selected clinic and the miner’s home. So, the mobile units park on the work site where they’re most accessible. Halldin said the test results are kept confidential. She added that the services are also offered to surface miners to whom the Federal Coal Mine and Health Safety Act didn’t apply.
Weissman said his division’s focus isn’t limited to mine-related scenarios. For example, in NIOSH’s Health Hazard Evaluation Program, workers and employers can request the agency’s help finding hazards in a workplace, he said.
T
ng the tools at the division’s disposal are two Mobile Occupational Safety and Health Units. The trucks are packed with specialized medical screening capabilities that travel to work sites, providing chest X-rays and breathing tests for miners to check for black lung.
Cara Halldin, a team lead on one of these trucks, said the service is provided completely free to miners. She said these services are guaranteed to them by the Federal Coal Mine and Health Safety Act of 1969. This act mandates mining companies provide these clinical services to miners.
“In the event a miner doesn’t go, we provide this as a supplement. This allows us to do outreach,” Halldin said, adding that while mining companies are required to provide those services, the miners aren’t required to use them, and many of them don’t.
This, she said, is often because of distance between the mine, the selected clinic and the miner’s home. So, the mobile units park on the work site where they’re most accessible. Halldin said the test results are kept confidential. She added that the services are also offered to surface miners to whom the Federal Coal Mine and Health Safety Act didn’t apply.
Weissman said his division’s focus isn’t limited to mine-related scenarios. For example, in NIOSH’s Health Hazard Evaluation Program, workers and employers can request the agency’s help finding hazards in a workplace, he said.