New industrial revolution has already begun around nanotechnologies, letting us anticipate major scientific breakthroughs that will affect each economic activity sector and whose expected global economic impacts will exceed $1000 billion annually by 2012. Simultaneously, many studies reveal that nanoparticles represent different occupational health and safety (OHS) risks unique to them and that often differ from the risks related to the same chemical substances with larger dimensions. As the number of potentially exposed workers increases and much uncertainty persists about OHS risks, this extended abstract proposes a framework for occupational risk management with the objective of controlling exposure to NPs in a context of a major lack of specific data related to the hazards of these substances and to the level of occupational exposure. The framework takes into consideration the equal representation of both the employers and workers in the Québec legislation and accounts the potential routes of exposure and focuses on a structured approach dealing with hazard identification, exposure characterization, risk assessment and risk management through different control methodologies. These are included in a prevention program that must be followed up, once it has been implemented, and refined through an iterative approach as new data become available.© 2009 IOP Publishing Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Ostiguy, C., Roberge, B., Ménard, L., & Endo, C. A. (2009). A good practice guide for safe work with nanoparticles: The Quebec approach. Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 151. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/151/1/012037
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