NIOSHTIC-2 Publications Search

Exposures and symptoms among workers after an offsite train derailment and vinyl chloride release.

Authors
Wilken JA; Graziano L; Vaouli E; Markiewicz K; Helverson R; Brinker K; Shumate AM; Duncan MA
Source
Am J Disaster Med 2015 Spring; 10(2):153-165
NIOSHTIC No.
20046696
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: In 2012 in New Jersey, a train derailment resulted in the puncture of a tanker car carrying liquid vinyl chloride under pressure, and a resulting airborne vinyl chloride plume drifted onto the grounds of a nearby refinery. This report details the investigation of exposures and symptoms among refinery workers.DESIGN AND SETTING: The investigation team met with refinery workers to discuss their experience after the derailment and provided workers a self-administered survey to document symptoms and worker responses during the incident. Associations among categorical variables and experiencing symptoms were evaluated using Fisher's exact test. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-six of 155 (17 percent) workers present at the refinery or driving on the access road the date the spill occurred completed the survey. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Any self-reported symptom following exposure from the vinyl chloride release. RESULTS: Fifteen workers (58 percent) reported =1 symptom, most commonly headache (12, 46 percent). Three (12 percent) reported using respiratory protection. No differences in reporting symptoms were observed by location during the incident or by the building in which workers sheltered. Workers who moved from one shelter to another during the incident (ie, broke shelter) were more likely to report symptoms (Fisher's exact test, p = 0.03); however, there are only limited data regarding vinyl chloride concentrations in shelters versus outside. CONCLUSIONS: Breaking shelter might result in greater exposures, and managers and health and safety officers of vulnerable facilities with limited physical access should consider developing robust shelter-in-place plans and alternate emergency egress plans. Workers should consider using respiratory protection if exiting a shelter is necessary during a chemical incident.
Keywords
Railroad-industry; Railroad-cars; Airborne-particles; Airborne-dusts; Chemical-composition; Chemical-properties; Exposure-levels; Risk-factors; Humans; Men; Women
CAS No.
75-01-4
Publication Date
20150301
Document Type
Journal Article
Fiscal Year
2015
Issue of Publication
2
ISSN
1932-149X
NIOSH Division
EPRO
Source Name
American Journal of Disaster Medicine
State
GA; CA; NJ; PA
Page last reviewed: May 11, 2023
Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Education and Information Division