From: "Murphy, Dr. Ruth Ann" <rmurphy**At_Symbol_Here**UMHB.EDU>
Subject: FW: [DCHAS-L] [DCHAS-L] DRAFT - Please review and send comments.
Date: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 17:27:30 +0000
Reply-To: ACS Division of Chemical Health and Safety <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**PRINCETON.EDU>
Message-ID: 83f88a2c84b14c0190186408042f4a91**At_Symbol_Here**umhb.edu
In-Reply-To <795591087.1647066.1588093511040**At_Symbol_Here**mail.yahoo.com>


Electric hand driers may sound good - no paper towel waste, etc. but they can just circulate the already corrupted air inside a public restroom.  You can just wave a Petri dish with agar medium in it around in a restroom and see what's growing in a few days, or so I've heard.

 

Ruth Ann

 

Ruth Ann Murphy, Ph.D.

Professor of Chemistry

Chairperson, Department of Chemistry, Environmental Science and Geology

Co-Chairperson, Health Professions Advisory Committee

Amy LeVesconte Professorship of Chemistry

JAMP Faculty Director

University of Mary Hardin-Baylor

900 College Street

Belton, TX  76513-2599

Phone 254.295.4542

Accepting Christ is life's greatest decision; following Christ is life's greatest adventure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

From: ACS Division of Chemical Health and Safety <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**PRINCETON.EDU> On Behalf Of Monona Rossol
Sent: Tuesday, April 28, 2020 12:05 PM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**PRINCETON.EDU
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] DRAFT - Please review and send comments.

 

EXTERNAL Exercise Caution

John, I agree on the water dispensing and hand driers.

 

I will use this list for guidance for our policies, but I won't endorse any system with these health checks.  Temperature monitoring and health checks  don't catch those who have not yet developed symptoms or the asymptomatic spreaders. 

 

They have to ramp up the availability of tests that can detect the virus as soon as people can start shedding it.  There are a couple of tests that look like they'll do this.  One of these tests is self-administered with virtual observation and direction by a medical professional.  And the plans do do tacking involves also providing tests for anyone contacting a known infected individual.  So the number of tests is already ramped up to do this.  It is just a little more time and there will be tests for others as well.

 

No test?  Then nobody is on a non-essential location or a job site as far as I'm concerned.  

 

Just which of your workers are you willing to lose?  Would you accept this risk level in the workplace if what was missing was fall protection equipment?  Nah, you'd wait for the bloody harnesses, you would.  

 

Hold out until we fully protect all the healthcare and essential industry workers, and then bring on other industries as soon as they have appropriate testing or a vaccine for those worers.    Monona

 

             ACCEPTABLE ENTRY CONDITIONS (Adjust as needed)

1.     Body temperature less than 100.4¡F (38¡C)

2.     Entrant in good health/not feeling ill.

3.     No other COVID-19 symptoms in past 7 days (Fever, Headache, Cough, Shortness of Breath, Chills, Muscle Pain, Sore Throat, Loss of smell or taste).

4.     No contact with positive or suspect-positive COVID-19 victims in past 14 days.

5.     Not ordered to quarantine or self-isolate by physician or government agent.

6.     Not traveled on mass transportation in past 14 days.



-----Original Message-----
From: John Callen <jbcallen**At_Symbol_Here**GMAIL.COM>
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**PRINCETON.EDU
Sent: Mon, Apr 27, 2020 8:10 pm
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] DRAFT - Please review and send comments.

Ralph,

 

In your "Prepare/Check Facilities Section," you might want add "Turn Off all Public Access Drinking Fountains" which are often near lavatories, unless they are motion activated.

 

Also and in lavatories, you might want to consider only motion activated faucets, toilets and paper towel dispensers and/or dryers. This might be a capital expense for educational and research institutions which have older buildings. 

 

Be Safe & Well!

 

John B. Callen, Ph.D.

3M Personal Safety Division - Retired

DCHAS Founding Member

(312) 632-0195



On Apr 27, 2020, at 6:43 PM, RAMPUR VISWANATH <000005c25051b089-dmarc-request**At_Symbol_Here**LISTS.PRINCETON.EDU> wrote:

 

Thanks a lot, Ralph. You hve taken interest to put your thoughts down. For me, your list is extensive and covers almost all areas and serves as a very good starting point for all of us. I will wait for others to make their comments.

 

Best Wishes, Rampur

 

Rampur Viswanath, Ph.D., REM, CHMM

US Fulbright Senior Scholar (2015-2016)

Vice-Chairman, Hazardous Materials Society, Rockville, Maryland, USA

Founder & President, ACHMM-India Chapter, Bangalore, India

Career Consultant, American Chemical Society, Washington, District of Columbia, United States 

Past Chairman, American Chemical Society's Southern Nevada Chapter, Las Vegas, United States

General Chairman, American Chemical Society's 2022-Western Regional Conference, Las Vegas, United States

International Ambassador-Alliance of Hazardous Materials Professionals, Rockville, Maryland, United States

Rotary District Governor (2011-2012)-D5080 (parts of Washington, Idaho and British Columbia)

Member-Rotary Club of Las Vegas (D5300), Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

 

 

 

On Monday, April 27, 2020, 01:41:48 PM PDT, Ralph Froehlich <rfroehlich**At_Symbol_Here**helixenv.com> wrote:

 

 

DCHAS:

 

I thought that some DCHAS members may be interested in this draft 2020 RETURN TO WORK POLICY & PROGRAM for review & comment. 

 

Maybe if we can agree on a final document, we could issue it as a guidance document for workplaces, schools, universities, research centers, and with modifications, healthcare organizations. It makes more sense to jointly agree on the expectations for return to work, than each individual putting together a program.

 

Ralph A. Froehlich, CIH, CSP, QEP

Helix Environmental, Inc. 

(937) 226-0650 office

 

2020 RETURN TO WORK POLICY & PROGRAM

 

 

PREPARE/CHECK FACILITIES

1.     Verify that all facility systems are operational and correct as needed:

¥Electric

¥HVAC

¥Plumbing

¥Roof/Walls/Windows/Doors

¥Information Technology

¥Fuel Oil/Natural gas

¥Security systems and barriers

¥Fire safety equipment

¥Emergency response equipment

¥Flammable/Toxic Gas monitors/lab hoods/local exhaust ventilation

¥Pollution control equipment

¥Waste, Universal Waste, Hazardous Waste storage and transport

¥Breakroom refrigerators

2.     Clean and disinfect workplace including all surfaces accessible to worker touch. Consider verification testing to ensure disinfection of contact surfaces.

3.     Replenish expired supplies (first aid, eyewash fluids, vending machines, time- or temperature-dependent reagents, bottled drinking water, soap/sanitizer, etc.).

4.     Establish barriers/location marking to identify social distancing expectations and encourage compliance in manufacturing and break areas.

 

ESTABLISH ENTRY SCREENING

1.     Establish acceptable entry screening conditions (temperature/health, reported contact with COVID-19 victims, ordered isolation).

 

             ACCEPTABLE ENTRY CONDITIONS (Adjust as needed)

1.     Body temperature less than 100.4¡F (38¡C)

2.     Entrant in good health/not feeling ill.

3.     No other COVID-19 symptoms in past 7 days (Fever, Headache, Cough, Shortness of Breath, Chills, Muscle Pain, Sore Throat, Loss of smell or taste).

4.     No contact with positive or suspect-positive COVID-19 victims in past 14 days.

5.     Not ordered to quarantine or self-isolate by physician or government agent.

6.     Not traveled on mass transportation in past 14 days.

 

2.     Delineate screening area to maintain social distancing, mark entry line spacing, and provide screening equipment (no-touch thermometers, hand sanitizer, facemasks, gloves, etc.). Consider tents for screening area/wait lines.

3.     Train screeners on required PPE and screening procedures and security personnel on screening security issues.

4.     Provide written instructions to diverted personnel regarding isolation and criteria for discontinuing isolation/return to work policy.

5.     Establish diversion rooms with social distancing for those identified as unacceptable for entry. Make sure that diversion rooms are accessible to exterior.

6.     Provide diverted personnel with transportation to medical services or residence. Ensure that support systems are in place for diverted workers.

 

INFORM SUPERVISORS, WORKERS AND CONTRACTORS

1.     Use direct communication (letters, emails, telephone calls, newspapers, video news, social media) to notify all about restart of facility.

2.     Plan for restart after week DEPENDING ON COVID-19 CONDITIONS. Allow for changes if needed.

3.     Consider pre-work "Open House" to demonstrate new entry requirements and facility entry conditions.

4.     Consider offering employers video tours of entry screening procedures through social media.

5.     Train workers on new work procedures and expectations by video conferencing or accessible video tour. Mark entry stations.

 

SCREEN WORKERS FOR ENTRY

1.     Establish staggered entry times by workgroups to minimize wait times.

2.     Use screening to reinforce additional PPE requirements (safety glasses, hearing protection, etc.)

3.     Anticipate delays and frustrations; use videos and music to reduce tensions.

4.     Ensure that diverted workers are cared for.

 

IDENTIFY PROBLEM AREAS/BOTTLENECKS FOR ATTENTION

1.     Establish command area for problem identification and resolution.

2.     Establish Corrective Action Team to develop and implement improvements.

3.     Use EHS/HR/Maintenance to evaluate improvements before implementation.

4.     Consider legal/insurance evaluation if needed.

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