Classification of occupational activities for assessment of inhalation exposure.

Hans Marquart, Thomas Schneider, Henk Goede, Martin Tischer, Jody Schinkel, Nick Warren, Wouter Fransman, Suzanne Spaan, Martie Van Tongeren, Hans Kromhout, Erik Tielemans, John W Cherrie

TNO Triskelion, PO Box 844, Zeist 3700 AV, Netherlands.

Journal Article: Annals of Occupational Hygiene (impact factor: 1.91). 09/2011; 55(9):989-1005. DOI: 10.1093/annhyg/mer072

Abstract

There is a large variety of activities in workplaces that can lead to emission of substances. Coding systems based on determinants of emission have so far not been developed. In this paper, a system of Activity Classes and Activity Subclasses is proposed for categorizing activities involving chemical use. Activity Classes share their so-called 'emission generation mechanisms' and physical state of the product handled and the underlying determinants of emission. A number of (industrial) stakeholders actively participated in testing and fine-tuning the system. With the help of these stakeholders, it was found to be relatively easy to allocate a large number of activities to the Activity Classes and Activity Subclasses. The system facilitates a more structured classification of activities in exposure databases, a structured analysis of the analogy of exposure activities, and a transparent quantification of the activity emission potential in (new) exposure assessment models. The first use of the system is in the Advanced REACH Tool.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

Activity Classes
 
activity emission potential
 
Activity Subclasses
 
Advanced REACH Tool
 
categorizing activities
 
determinants
 
easy
 
exposure activities
 
exposure databases
 
large variety
 
new
 
physical state
 
so-called 'emission generation mechanisms'
 
structured analysis
 
structured classification
 
substances
 
system facilitates
 
transparent quantification
 
underlying determinants