A reduced workplace exposure threshold and strict bans are needed to curb Australia's rapidly evolving silicosis crisis, according to the ACTU.|A reduced workplace exposure threshold and strict bans are needed to curb Australia's rapidly evolving silicosis crisis, according to the ACTU.
A reduced workplace exposure threshold and strict bans are needed to curb Australia’s rapidly evolving silicosis crisis, according to the ACTU.
ACTU Assistant Secretary Liam O’Brien said recent reports suggest as many as 1 in 5 engineered stone workers are affected by silicosis – many of which will face a lifetime living with the disease, “hoping for a lung transplant.”
Exposure to high quantities of silica causes lung cancer, silicosis and autoimmune diseases like scleroderma.
“These diseases are entirely preventable and the Federal Government must ban high silica content engineered stone products and promote the use of safer alternatives,” O’Brien said.
The ACTU says the National Dust Disease Taskforce was established two years ago to combat the deadly disease, and since then the Federal Government has done nothing to protect workers.
The ACTU is calling on the Federal Government to urgently enact the following:
“Australia has some of the highest rates of use of engineered stone in the world. Australian consumers would be shocked to discover the misery and harm caused by these products.”
“The workers’ compensation system must be reformed to ensure workers with chronic diseases caused by work are not thrown onto a social security system where their benefits are terminated after only two years. There should also be long-term health, financial and vocational support and retraining assistance that will enable sufferers to return to safe and meaningful work.”
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