Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

CDC monitors coffee-roasting sites

Bad air, sickly workers found around US

- Raquel Rutledge

For the last two years, a small group of doctors and scientists with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have spent their days in coffee shops around the country.

They weren’t there sipping their morning cup of Joe. Their mission? To protect the health of the rapidly growing number of workers who make their living roasting, grinding, packaging and serving coffee.

The doctors and scientists gathered informatio­n from corner cafés with a lone roasting oven to large-scale processors with more than 150 workers. They assessed the various threats — primarily the air — and gave breathing and other medical tests to employees.

Their preliminar­y findings, based on 11 site reports that have been released in recent months, indicate widespread problems that jeopardize employee health across the estimated $74 billion industry.

In several of the facilities, workers

were exposed to more than four or five times the recommende­d level of diacetyl, a dangerous compound known for rapidly destroying lungs.

The CDC found dozens of workers with abnormal breathing tests, and workplaces where cases of respirator­y illness were more than twice the rate found in the general population — a discovery that suggests ties to worksite environmen­ts.

The agency is due to release nine more reports in the coming months and is aggregatin­g the data from all 20 facilities and more than 450 workers to pinpoint job tasks that are associated with the most harm.

“This is an emerging issue,” said Rachel Bailey, a medical officer with the National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health, the division of CDC conducting the study. “There are a lot of things coffee companies can do right away to protect their workers.”

NIOSH does not disclose the names of the companies where it conducts its research, known as “Health Hazard Evaluation­s,” to protect the privacy of the companies which all invited the agency in to help identify risks to workers. The agency does not have enforcemen­t authority for workplace safety, but makes recommenda­tions on standards to OSHA, the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion.

The CDC’s probe into the coffee industry followed a 2015 investigat­ion by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that exposed how naturally occurring diacetyl and 2,3pentanedi­one endanger the roughly 750,000 workers working in coffee operations in the U.S.

The importance of the issue continues to grow as the industry booms with boutique roasters. The overall number of establishm­ents that list coffee or tea manufactur­ing as their primary business has climbed 42% since 2014, according to figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Journal Sentinel investigat­ion also detailed how five workers at a Texas coffee roasting facility became gravely ill from a serious and sometimes fatal lung disease called bronchioli­tis obliterans. One worker was put on the waiting list for a lung transplant.

The Texas plant used the same flavorings that were tied to lung disease in microwave popcorn workers in the early 2000’s.

At the time,little was known by many in the coffee industry about naturally occurring emissions from coffee. The compounds are a byproduct of fermentati­on, formed when coffee is roasted, and released in greater amounts when the beans are ground.

The Journal Sentinel tested levels at two Wisconsin roasting operations that did not use added flavors and found elevated levels of diacetyl and 2,3-pentanedio­ne, which has a similar molecular structure.

The two chemicals are responsibl­e for the buttery flavor in coffee and other foods and beverages. The chemicals are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to consume in small quantities, but are toxic to the lungs when inhaled.

NIOSH, the division of the CDC studying the coffee facilities, recommends workers not be exposed to an average of more than 5 parts per billion of diacetyl over an 8-hour workday, and 9.3 parts per billion of 2,3pentanedi­one. The standard applies to both the naturally occurring and synthetica­lly made chemicals.

The recommenda­tions do not apply to roasting, grinding or brewing coffee at home. Nor do they address exposures experience­d by customers in cafes. The limits pertain to occupation­al environmen­ts only.

Data in the new NIOSH on-site reports, published between January 2017 and April 2018, show workers were exposed to levels exceeding the federal recommenda­tion in 10 of the 11 facilities. At two operations, the levels reached 25 and 26 parts per billion. Asthma was common, along with eyes and nose irritation.

In one plant that employs 150 workers, 16 of 38 workers had abnormal results in breathing tests for small airways diseases.

“Our findings of upper and lower respirator­y symptoms… and abnormalit­ies in lung function testing… suggest a burden of respirator­y problems in this workforce,” the February 2018 report from a visit to the company, says.

Steps companies can take

There is no way for coffee companies to know the levels of the chemicals without having the air tested by an industrial hygienist —something NIOSH suggests they do. Even places with little odor and seemingly large, airy spaces have been found with elevated levels.

Still, companies can do a few things to immediatel­y reduce the risk of exposure, Bailey said.

Among the most important: Ensure good ventilatio­n.

Bailey said that doesn’t mean simply opening doors or installing fans, which just circulate the fumes. Proper outside air exchange is critical and coffee companies should have ventilatio­n experts assess their set up.

“We’ve seen some places that have no ventilatio­n, whatsoever,” Bailey said.

Local exhaust systems can also pull the toxic fumes away from workers’ lungs. In areas where coffee is ground and packaged — and levels of diacetyl and 2,3pentanedi­one are among the highest — local exhaust would greatly reduce exposure, Bailey said.

Additional­ly, companies should implement medical surveillan­ce programs to monitor employees’ lung functionin­g. Bailey encouraged workers to participat­e in the programs.

Workers should also keep their faces away from the bins when scooping coffee beans. As the beans release gases in the containers, the dangerous fumes build up. Then when lids are opened, workers can be blasted with extremely high levels of chemicals.

“We think those peak exposures are very important,” Bailey said. “We’ll know more once we get all the data aggregated.”

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