Related Links

Featured Links

Recommended Sites
Health Links




Quote of the Day




Recommended Products



Click here for eBay Motors!


 


 
 
Featured Health Articles

Health and Beauty: Healthy Skin, More Than Meets The Eye
(NC)-The visible signs of aging can be controlled, but the typical office life may not be your skin's best friend. Dry, recycled air is one of the enemies you need to tackle, so are factors like air conditioning, long-term emission effects from computers, ...

Penis-health Tips
Good penis-care will get you far greater, harder erection strength and stamina, as well as general sexual satisfaction. A healthy penis provides endless joy of a healthy sex life! Testosterone is a hormone that helps maintain sperm production, sex drive, ...

The Heart Effect: Startling New Information About How Music Affects Your Health
Twenty-four young, healthy test subjects lay quietly in a university lab, listening to carefully chosen music through headphones, as doctors and technicians hovered around them meticulously measuring their vital signs. The study concluded quickly and the ...

Is DIY dangerous for your health?
 

MDF is cheap and versatile, which has made it a material that has been embraced by a huge number of people in the DIY epidemic of the last few years. This hunger was fuelled by programmes such BBC's Changing Rooms which incorporated MDF into most of its designs. Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen and Handy Andy demonstrated how the flexible material could be cut into just about any shape, and curved into unique contemporary furniture and fittings – often challenging the very idea of good taste! So, is MDF the perfect DIY material? Or are there hidden dangers?

Recently, there has been considerable publicity about the health hazards of using MDF. There have been reports of how the dust produced when working with MDF can cause health problems such asthma and even cancer. One trade union stated that 'MDF is the asbestos of the nineties'! Alarming stuff, but are there any grounds for concerns?

Recent assessments of the risks
The Health and Safety has classified MDF as a soft wood and therefore not designated as a carcinogen in the UK. However, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) does not distinguish between hardwoods and softwoods, and it groups 'wood dust' as 'carcinogenic to humans'.

Formaldehyde, which is included in bonding resins used in MDF, is also classified by the IARC as 'possibly carcinogenic to humans'. They argue that, even at low levels, inhalation of formaldehyde can cause irritation to the eyes, nose, throat and mucous membrane. It can also affect the skin, leading to dermatitis, and to respiratory system causing asthma and rhinitis.

MDF in other countries
Reports that MDF is banned in the USA and Australia are speculative. However, there are tighter restrictions on its production and use. In the USA, there are limits on formaldehyde emissions from MDF and home owners in California have to be warned that their new home has been built using MDF which 'contains a chemical known to cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive hazards'. Australian workers are warned that formaldehyde is 'a probable carcinogen'.

Is it safe to use MDF?
A HSE spokeswoman stated that 'at present there is no evidence to suggest it (MDF) poses a risk and can be compared to other risks like asbestos'.

However, despite these assessments of MDF and health risks, it is still shrouded in controversy. Therefore, it is advised that anyone using MDF follows these guidelines:

•Try to use an alternative to MDF - some manufacturers sell low formaldehyde or zero formaldehyde emission boards

•If there is no alternative, try to ensure the following:
-Always use a protective face mask and eye wear when sawing or sanding MDF board
-Only saw outside or in a well ventilated room
-Wear gloves to avoid the formaldehyde coming into contact with the skin

Compensation claims
Accident Compensation People (www.accident-compensation-people-uk.co.uk), who specialise in compensation claims for people affected by airborne cancers, say it's too early to speculate about the possibility of compensation claims against manufacturers, or employers who fail to protect their staff from the dangers of MDF.

James Williams, Technical Claims Manager at Accident Compensation People said:

"Nasal cancer has been associated with hard wood dusts for sometime. Many years ago English furniture makers showed an increased incidence of this type of cancer. There does also seem to be a growing concern about soft-wood dust, especially MDF".

The hazards of MDF dust are quite startling and any further developments will have to be monitored closely to see if it is 'the asbestos of the nineties'.


About the Author
Deborah Hughes
deborah@accident-compensation-people-uk.co.uk
0800 781 7789

Note to editors
www.accident-compensation-people-uk.co.uk provides a cost-free service for people seeking compensation following exposure to industrial dusts such as asbestos. We work under a no cost, no win, no fee policy which mean our customers don't pay a penny and keep 100% compensation.




Google
Health News

Health reform pace 'painfully slow' - Channel 4 News
An "expensive" Government health reform has so far failed to deliver real benefits for patients, experts have said. Progress in implementing the policy has been "painfully slow" and, in some areas, has stalled completely, they said. Practice-based ...

TomoTherapy to Present at Piper Jaffray Health Care Conference - PR Inside
in New York City. A live Webcast of this presentation will be available on the cts.businesswire.com/ct/CT"id=smartlink&url=http%3A%2F%2Finv .. . An archive of the Webcast will also be available on the company"s site for 30 days following the ...

Killer disease hits Zimbabwe as people struggle to find food - Sydney Morning Herald
Faced with starvation and oppression, Zimbabweans now confront a new deadly threat - cholera. A group of doctors says that President Robert Mugabe's Government is to blame for a cholera epidemic sweeping the nation and that the disease's spread there ...

Health Mandate Builds Support As Insurers Endorse Approach - Investors Business Daily
Political momentum is growing to make everyone buy health insurance — or else. Private health insurers on Wednesday said they could accept laws requiring them to accept all customers — regardless of pre-existing medical conditions — if ...

Daschle to take health post, another familiar face - Gainesville Sun
WASHINGTON (AP) _ Barack Obama is enlisting former Senate leader Tom Daschle as his health secretary, embracing a third Washington insider in the early stages of Cabinet-building by the president-elect who promised change. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the ...