A One-Month Monitoring of Exposure to Solar UV Radiation of a Group of Construction Workers in Tuscany

Autor(en): Modenese, Alberto
Gobba, Fabriziomaria
Paolucci, Valentina
John, Swen Malte 
Sartorelli, Pietro
Wittlich, Marc
Stichwörter: construction; Energy & Fuels; exposure assessment; occupational safety and health; OUTDOOR WORKERS; personal dosimetry; skin cancer prevention; SKIN-CANCER; solar radiation; ultraviolet rays; ULTRAVIOLET-RADIATION; workers health
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Herausgeber: MDPI
Journal: ENERGIES
Volumen: 13
Ausgabe: 22
Zusammenfassung: 
Solar radiation exposure at work is a relevant heath risk in the construction sector. Our objective was to monitor for a full month the individual solar ultraviolet radiation (UVR) exposure of a group of three construction workers active in Siena (latitude = 43 degrees 19 ` N), a town in Tuscany (Italy). We used personal electronic dosimeters ``X-2012-10'' (Gigahertz, Turkenfeld, Germany) to register the UV irradiance in the UVA and UVB/C regions separately and we consulted a specific database to retrieve the corresponding ambient erythemal UVR dose (cloud-free conditions). In spring, construction workers from central Italy received a quite variable UVR dose, between 0.9 standard erythemal doses (SED) and 15.6 SED/day, 5.7 on average. Considering the proportion with respect to the potential environmental exposure, personal exposure resulted between 2.7% and 31.2% of the ambient erythemal dose, with a mean value of 12.5%. Cumulatively, the three construction workers received in one working month a UVR dose of more than 120 SED. In a year, we estimated that a construction worker from Tuscany region is exposed to about 750 SED. This data demonstrates that construction workers in Italy are exposed to extremely high levels of solar UVR, with a relevant risk of developing adverse health effects related to the potential accumulation of UVR-induced damage in susceptible biological tissues, such as the skin and the eyes.
DOI: 10.3390/en13226035

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