American Society Of Engineers Offers Important Chemical Safety Tips
Des Plaines, IL As seasons change it is important to address the possible hazards associated with the chemicals, every day products, in your home as one does in the workplace. The American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) notes that in every home the cleaning and other chemicals that sit side by side in your cupboards, the garage, the bathroom, the basement and the attic, could be extremely harmful to you and your family if you mix them or use them incorrectly.
"Working safely with chemicals in the home is really no different than working with them in the workplace," ASSE member Pam Ferrante, CSP, CHMM, of Pittsburgh, PA, said today. "Sometimes the chemicals used are more hazardous and we use larger quantities, but the safety principles are the same. We urge everyone to be cautious."
Let's say you had just about finished a bottle of cleaner but didn't want to throw it out so you set it aside. Months later you go back and find that corrosion has begun to develop around the cap and you realize you should put it in the garbage, but should you drain the contents? And if so, where? This is just one of several questions people ask themselves when it comes to chemical safety in the home. Here are a few guidelines ASSE members and Ferrante suggest you follow to increase your safety:
- Read the warning label. Much time has gone into developing it for good reason. Be sure you understand and follow what it says on how to use the product safely, how to protect yourself when using it and how to properly store it. The manufacturer's contact information is always on the label if you need more information.
- More is not better, just more dangerous. Use all chemicals sparingly in the home.
- Don't take the hazardous chemical out of the original container and place it in something else; like an old plastic milk jug or an empty liter soda bottle. Not only are these containers not likely to be capable of safely storing the substance, it may be hard to remember down the road what you put in there in the first place. And remember, a young child may not know the difference between a cleaning product colored yellow stored in an old Mountain Dew plastic container and the real thing.
- After using, immediately wash your hands or any other part of your body that may have come into direct contact with the substance with warm soapy water.
- Follow safety recommendations when using hazardous substances. Properly ventilate the area by turning on the fan and opening the windows. If recommended, wear gloves, long sleeves and masks.
- Don't leave chemical products unattended. If you must leave the room in the middle of a task, either put the product away or take it with you.
- Keep all hazardous chemicals out of the reach of young children or locked up. Properly mark and store under lock and key all household and pool chemicals, paints and poisons. Keep these on a high shelf, out of children's reach.
- Dispose of household and chemical products that are leaking, expired or that look bad.
- Know how to properly dispose of chemical products. If you don't know how to dispose of the products, contact your local waste management authority.
- Post the poison control center number near every phone -- in the U.S. it's 1-800-222-1222.
- Never store hazardous chemicals near food or food products. Keep hazardous chemicals away from items you use to prepare and cook foods in, such as pans and silverware. You should never contaminate pots, pans and cooking utensils with a hazardous substance.
- Keeping a container of baking soda near the stove to put out grease-based fires does help, but it is advisable to purchase a small fire extinguisher for the kitchen. Many stores now carry a "K" type extinguisher designed for the kitchen. Be aware that unless a fire extinguisher company checks it, the useful life of the extinguisher is about two years. Prepare to replace it every other year or, even better Ferrante notes, when you change the batteries in your home's smoke detectors.
- It is dangerous to combine two common household cleaners – chlorine bleach and ammonia. It forms a highly toxic gas, which has caused serious respiratory injury and even some deaths.
The potentially harmful substances used daily in homes usually have one or more of the following characteristics -- corrosive: they eat or wear away at many materials; flammable: they easily ignite; reactive: they can cause an explosion or produce deadly vapors; and, toxic: they are poisonous to humans and animals. Some examples of hazardous wastes found around the home include antifreeze, batteries, brake fluid, chemical strippers, chlorine bleach, contact cement, drain cleaners, insecticides, lawn chemicals, nail polish remover, spot removers, toilet and oven cleaners and used motor oil.
"Most households, garages and storage sheds in America have liquids and solids that are considered poisons. An inordinate number of the standard household cleaning products that we use on a daily basis can be poisonous, so be cautious," said ASSE's Administrator of the Public Sector Practice Specialty Kim L. Arnold, of Columbus, Ohio. "Also, for some medicines, even one adult-strength pill can be deadly to a child."
Arnold suggests that people keep a bottle of syrup of ipecac in your home in case of emergency and to use it only when told to do so by the poison control center. It is also recommended that before applying pesticides or other household chemicals, remove children and their toys, as well as pets, from the area. Keep children and pets away until the pesticide has dried or as long as is recommended on the label.
SOURCE: ASSE