Wash. Admin. Code § 296-62-07383 - Appendix A - Substance safety data sheet for ethylene oxide (nonmandatory)
(1)
Substance identification
(a)
Substance: Ethylene oxide
(C2H4O).
(b) Synonyms: Dihydrooxirene, dimethylene
oxide, EO, 1,2-epoxyethane, EtO , ETO , oxacyclopropane, oxane, oxidoethane,
alpha/beta-oxidoethane, oxiran, oxirane.
(c) Ethylene oxide can be found as a liquid
or vapor.
(d) EtO is used in the
manufacture of ethylene glycol, surfactants, ethanolamines, glycol ethers, and
other organic chemicals. EtO is also used as a sterilant and
fumigant.
(e) Appearance and odor:
Colorless liquid below 10.7°C (51.3°F) or colorless gas with ether-like
odor detected at approximately 700 parts EtO per million parts of air (700
ppm).
(f) Permissible exposure:
Exposure may not exceed 1 part EtO per million parts of air averaged over the
8-hour work day.
(2)
Health hazard data
(a) Ethylene
oxide can cause bodily harm if you inhale the vapor, if it comes into contact
with your eyes or skin, or if you swallow it.
(b) Effects of overexposure:
(i) Ethylene oxide in liquid form can cause
eye irritation and injury to the cornea, frostbite, and severe irritation and
blistering of the skin upon prolonged or confined contact. Ingestion of EtO can
cause gastric irritation and liver injury. Acute effects from inhalation of EtO
vapors include respiratory irritation and lung injury, headache, nausea,
vomiting, diarrhea, shortness of breath, and cyanosis (blue or purple coloring
of skin). Exposure has also been associated with the occurrence of cancer,
reproductive effects, mutagenic changes, neurotoxicity, and
sensitization.
(ii) EtO has been
shown to cause cancer in laboratory animals and has been associated with higher
incidences of cancer in humans. Adverse reproductive effects and chromosome
damage may also occur from EtO exposure.
(c) Reporting signs and symptoms: You should
inform your employer if you develop any signs or symptoms and suspect that they
are caused by exposure to EtO .
(3)
Emergency first-aid
procedures
(a) Eye exposure: If EtO
gets into your eyes, wash your eyes immediately with large amounts of water,
lifting the lower and upper eyelids. Get medical attention immediately. Contact
lenses should not be worn when working with this chemical.
(b) Skin exposure: If EtO gets on your skin,
immediately wash the contaminated skin with water. If EtO soaks through your
clothing, especially your shoes, remove the clothing immediately and wash the
skin with water using an emergency deluge shower. Get medical attention
immediately. Thoroughly wash contaminated clothing before reusing. Contaminated
leather shoes or other leather articles should not be reused and should be
discarded.
(c) Inhalation: If large
amounts of EtO are inhaled, the exposed person must be moved to fresh air at
once. If breathing has stopped, perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Keep the
affected person warm and at rest. Get medical attention immediately.
(d) Swallowing: When EtO has been swallowed,
give the person large quantities of water immediately. After the water has been
swallowed, try to get the person to vomit by having him or her touch the back
of the throat with his or her finger. Do not make an unconscious person vomit.
Get medical attention immediately.
(e) Rescue: Move the affected person from the
hazardous exposure. If the exposed person has been overcome, attempt rescue
only after notifying at least one other person of the emergency and putting
into effect established emergency procedures. Do not become a casualty
yourself. Understand your emergency rescue procedures and know the location of
the emergency equipment before the need arises.
(4)
Respirators and protective
clothing
(a) Respirators:
(i) You may be required to wear a respirator
for nonroutine activities, in emergencies, while your employer is in the
process of reducing EtO exposure through engineering controls , and in areas
where engineering controls are not feasible. Only air supplied
positive-pressure, full-facepiece respirators are approved for protection
against EtO . If air-purifying respirators are worn in the future, they must
have a label issued by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH) under the provisions of 42 C.F.R. part 84 stating that the
respirators have been certified for use with ethylene oxide . For effective
protection, respirators must fit your face and head snugly. Respirators must
not be loosened or removed in work situations where their use is
required.
(ii) EtO does not have a
detectable odor except at levels well above the permissible exposure limits. If
you can smell EtO while wearing a respirator, proceed immediately to fresh air.
If you experience difficulty breathing while wearing a respirator, tell your
employer.
(b) Protective
clothing:
(i) You may be required to wear
impermeable clothing, gloves, a face shield, or other appropriate protective
clothing to prevent skin contact with liquid EtO or EtO -containing solutions.
Where protective clothing is required, your employer must provide clean
garments to you as necessary to assure that the clothing protects you
adequately.
(ii) Replace or repair
protective clothing that has become torn or otherwise damaged.
(iii) EtO must never be allowed to remain on
the skin. Clothing and shoes which are not impermeable to EtO should not be
allowed to become contaminated with EtO , and if they do, the clothing should be
promptly removed and decontaminated. Contaminated leather shoes should be
discarded. Once EtO penetrates shoes or other leather articles, they should not
be worn again.
(c) Eye
protection: You must wear splashproof safety goggles in areas where liquid EtO
or EtO -containing solutions may contact your eyes. In addition, contact lenses
should not be worn in areas where eye contact with EtO can occur.
(5)
Precautions for safe
use, handling, and storage
(a) EtO is a
flammable liquid, and its vapors can easily form explosive mixtures in
air.
(b) EtO must be stored in
tightly closed containers in a cool, well-ventilated area, away from heat,
sparks, flames, strong oxidizers, alkalines, and acids, strong bases, acetylide
forming metals such as copper, silver, mercury and their alloys.
(c) Sources of ignition such as smoking
material, open flames and some electrical devices are prohibited wherever EtO
is handled, used, or stored in a manner that could create a potential fire or
explosion hazard.
(d) You should
use nonsparking tools when opening or closing metal containers of EtO , and
containers must be bonded and grounded in the rare instances in which liquid
EtO is poured or transferred.
(e)
Impermeable clothing wet with liquid EtO or EtO -containing solutions may be
easily ignited. If you are wearing impermeable clothing and are splashed with
liquid EtO or EtO -containing solution, you should immediately remove the
clothing while under an emergency deluge shower.
(f) If your skin comes into contact with
liquid EtO or EtO -containing solutions, you should immediately remove the EtO
using an emergency deluge shower.
(g) You should not keep food, beverages, or
smoking materials in regulated areas where employee exposures are above the
permissible exposure limits.
(h)
Fire extinguishers and emergency deluge showers for quick drenching should be
readily available, and you should know where they are and how to operate
them.
(i) Ask your supervisor where
EtO is used in your work area and for any additional plant safety and health
rules.
(6)
Access
to information
(a) Each year, your
employer is required to inform you of the information contained in this
standard and appendices for EtO . In addition, your employer must instruct you
in the proper work practices for using EtO emergency procedures, and the
correct use of protective equipment.
(b) Your employer is required to determine
whether you are being exposed to EtO . You or your representative has the right
to observe employee measurements and to record the results obtained. Your
employer is required to inform you of your exposure. If your employer
determines that you are being overexposed, he or she is required to inform you
of the actions which are being taken to reduce your exposure to within
permissible exposure limits.
(c)
Your employer is required to keep records of your exposures and medical
examinations. These exposure records must be kept by the employer for at least
thirty years. Medical records must be kept for the period of your employment
plus thirty years.
(d) Your
employer is required to release your exposure and medical records to your
physician or designated representative upon your written request.
(7)
Sterilant use of EtO in
hospitals and health care facilities .
(a) This section of Appendix A, for
informational purposes, sets forth EPA's recommendations for modifications in
workplace design and practice in hospitals and health care facilities for which
the Environmental Protection Agency has registered EtO for uses as a sterilant
or fumigant under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act,
7 U.S.C.
136
et seq. These new
recommendations, published in the Federal Register by EPA at 49 FR
15268, as modified in today's Register, are intended to help
reduce the exposure of hospital and health care workers to EtO to 1 ppm. EPA's
recommended workplace design and workplace practice are as follows:
(i)
Workplace design
(A) Installation of gas line hand valves.
Hand valves must be installed on the gas supply line at the connection to the
supply cylinders to minimize leakage during cylinder change.
(B) Installation of capture boxes. Sterilizer
operations result in a gas/water discharge at the completion of the process.
This discharge is routinely piped to a floor drain which is generally located
in an equipment or an adjacent room. When the floor drain is not in the same
room as the sterilizer and workers are not normally present, all that is
necessary is that the room be well ventilated.
(C) The installation of a "capture box" will
be required for those work place layouts where the floor drain is located in
the same room as the sterilizer or in a room where workers are normally
present. A "capture box" is a piece of equipment that totally encloses the
floor drain where the discharge from the sterilizer is pumped. The "capture
box" is to be vented directly to a nonrecirculating or dedicated ventilation
system. Sufficient air intake should be allowed at the bottom of the box to
handle the volume of air that is ventilated from the top of the box. The
"capture box" can be made of metal, plastic, wood or other equivalent material.
The box is intended to reduce levels of EtO discharged into the work room
atmosphere. The use of a "capture box" is not required if: (I) The vacuum pump
discharge floor drain is located in a well ventilated equipment or other room
where workers are not normally present or (II) the water sealed vacuum pump
discharges directly to a closed sealed sewer line (check local plumbing
codes).
(D) If it is impractical to
install a vented "capture box" and a well ventilated equipment or other room is
not feasible, a box that can be sealed over the floor drain may be used if: (I)
The floor drain is located in a room where workers are not normally present and
EtO cannot leak into an occupied area, and (II) the sterilizer in use is less
than 12 cubic feet in capacity (check local plumbing codes).
(ii)
Ventilation of aeration
units.
(A) Existing aeration units.
Existing units must be vented to a nonrecirculating or dedicated system or
vented to an equipment or other room where workers are not normally present and
which is well ventilated. Aerator units must be positioned as close as possible
to the sterilizer to minimize the exposure from the off-gassing of sterilized
items.
(B) Installation of new
aerator units (where none exist). New aerator units must be vented as described
above for existing aerators. Aerators must be in place by July 1,
1986.
(iii) Ventilation
during cylinder change. Workers may be exposed to short but relatively high
levels of EtO during the change of gas cylinders. To reduce exposure from this
route, users must select one of three alternatives designed to draw off gas
that may be released when the line from the sterilizer to the cylinder is
disconnected:
(A) Location of cylinders in a
well ventilated equipment room or other room where workers are not normally
present.
(B) Installation of a
flexible hose (at least four inches in diameter) to a nonrecirculating or
dedicated ventilation system and located in the area of cylinder change in such
a way that the hose can be positioned at the point where the sterilizer gas
line is disconnected from the cylinder.
(C) Installation of a hood that is part of a
nonrecirculating or dedicated system and positioned no more than one foot above
the point where the change of cylinders takes place.
(iv) Ventilation of sterilizer door area. One
of the major sources of exposure to EtO occurs when the sterilizer door is
opened following the completion of the sterilization process. In order to
reduce this avenue of exposure, a hood or metal canopy closed on each end must
be installed over the sterilizer door. The hood or metal canopy must be
connected to a nonrecirculating or dedicated ventilation system or one that
exhausts gases to a well ventilated equipment or other room where workers are
not normally present. A hood or canopy over the sterilizer door is required for
use even with those sterilizers that have a purge cycle and must be in place by
July 1, 1986.
(v) Ventilation of
sterilizer relief valve. Sterilizers are typically equipped with a safety
relief device to release gas in case of increased pressure in the sterilizer.
Generally, such relief devices are used on pressure vessels. Although these
pressure relief devices are rarely opened for hospital and health care
sterilizers, it is suggested that they be designed to exhaust vapor from the
sterilizer by one of the following methods:
(A) Through a pipe connected to the outlet of
the relief valve ventilated directly outdoors at a point high enough to be away
from passers by, and not near any windows that open, or near any air
conditioning or ventilation air intakes.
(B) Through a connection to an existing or
new nonrecirculating or dedicated ventilation system.
(C) Through a connection to a well ventilated
equipment or other room where workers are not normally present.
(vi) Ventilation systems. Each
hospital and health care facility affected by this notice that uses EtO for the
sterilization of equipment and supplies must have a ventilation system which
enables compliance with the requirements of (a)(i)(B) through (v) of this
subsection in the manner described in these sections and within the time frames
allowed. Thus, each affected hospital and health care facility must have or
install a nonrecirculating or dedicated ventilation equipment or other room
where workers are not normally present in which to vent EtO .
(vii) Installation of alarm systems. An
audible and visual indicator alarm system must be installed to alert personnel
of ventilation system failures, i.e., when the ventilation fan motor is not
working.
(b)
Workplace practices
(i) All the
workplace practices discussed in this unit must be permanently posted near the
door of each sterilizer prior to use by any operator.
(ii)
Changing of supply line
filters.
Filters in the sterilizer liquid line must be changed when necessary, by the following procedure:
(A) Close the cylinder valve and the hose
valve.
(B) Disconnect the cylinder
hose (piping) from the cylinder.
(C) Open the hose valve and bleed slowly into
a proper ventilating system at or near the in-use supply cylinders.
(D) Vacate the area until the line is
empty.
(E) Change the
filter.
(F) Reconnect the lines and
reverse the valve position.
(G)
Check hoses, filters, and valves for leaks with a fluorocarbon leak detector
(for those sterilizers using the eighty-eight percent chlorofluorocarbon,
twelve percent ethylene oxide mixture (12/88)).
(iii)
Restricted access area.
(A) Areas involving use of EtO must be
designated as restricted access areas. They must be identified with signs or
floor marks near the sterilizer door, aerator, vacuum pump floor drain
discharge, and in-use cylinder storage.
(B) All personnel must be excluded from the
restricted area when certain operations are in progress, such as discharging a
vacuum pump, emptying a sterilizer liquid line, or venting a nonpurge
sterilizer with the door ajar or other operations where EtO might be released
directly into the face of workers.
(iv)
Door opening procedures.
(A) Sterilizers with purge cycles. A load
treated in a sterilizer equipped with a purge cycle should be removed
immediately upon completion of the cycle (provided no time is lost opening the
door after cycle is completed). If this is not done, the purge cycle should be
repeated before opening door.
(B)
Sterilizers without purge cycles. For a load treated in a sterilizer not
equipped with a purge cycle, the sterilizer door must be ajar six inches for
fifteen minutes, and then fully opened for at least another fifteen minutes
before removing the treated load. The length of time of the second period
should be established by peak monitoring for one hour after the two
fifteen-minute periods suggested. If the level is above 10 ppm time-weighted
average for eight hours, more time should be added to the second waiting period
(door wide open). However, in no case may the second period be shortened to
less than fifteen minutes.
(v)
Chamber unloading
procedures.
(A) Procedures for
unloading the chamber must include the use of baskets or rolling carts, or
baskets and rolling tables to transfer treated loads quickly, thus avoiding
excessive contact with treated articles, and reducing the duration of
exposures.
(B) If rolling carts are
used, they should be pulled not pushed by the sterilizer operators to avoid
offgassing exposure.
(vi) Maintenance. A written log should be
instituted and maintained documenting the date of each leak detection and any
maintenance procedures undertaken. This is a suggested use practice and is not
required.
(vii) Leak detection.
Sterilizer door gaskets, cylinder and vacuum piping, hoses, filters, and valves
must be checked for leaks under full pressure with a Fluorocarbon leak detector
(for 12/88 systems only) every two weeks by maintenance personnel. Also, the
cylinder piping connections must be checked after changing cylinders.
Particular attention in leak detection should be given to the automatic
solenoid valves that control the flow of EtO to the sterilizer. Specifically, a
check should be made at the EtO gasline entrance port to the sterilizer, while
the sterilizer door is open and the solenoid valves are in a closed
position.
(viii) Maintenance
procedures. Sterilizer/aerator door gaskets, valves, and fittings must be
replaced when necessary as determined by maintenance personnel in their
biweekly checks; in addition, visual inspection of the door gaskets for cracks,
debris, and other foreign substances should be conducted daily by the
operator.
Notes
Statutory Authority: RCW 49.17.010, [49.17].040 and[49.17].050 . 99-10-071, § 296-62-07383, filed 5/4/99, effective 9/1/99. Statutory Authority: Chapter 49.17 RCW. 88-14-108 (Order 88-11), § 296-62-07383, filed 7/6/88; 87-24-051 (Order 87-24), § 296-62-07383, filed 11/30/87.
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