DIY dust 'can give you heart disease'

Drilling and wall chasing, in which grooves for cables are cut in walls, seemed to produce particularly high levels of ultrafine particles.

Drilling and wall chasing, in which grooves for cables are cut in walls, seemed to produce particularly high levels of ultrafine particles.

Published Sep 4, 2015

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London - It is the excuse that men who hate DIY have been waiting for: household renovations could be bad for the health.

British researchers have warned that sanding and drilling create “dangerous dust” emissions – including clouds of microscopic particles linked to heart disease and cancer.

They called for health and safety regulations to be updated to protect builders and urged amateur enthusiasts to protect themselves.

With face masks not completely effective in filtering out the suspect particles, they recommend wetting walls and other surfaces to trap dust ahead of starting work.

Study author Prashant Kumar said: “Some of the most harmful particles are invisible and we shouldn’t underestimate the effect on our health, and on the health of those around us.”

The warning comes amid a DIY boom. Latest figures show that spending on home improvement reached £5.5-billion last year – the highest level since the recession.

And a report by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors found that families are opting to mend or extend their current homes rather than move. A lack of suitable housing and high stamp duty fees have made “renovation and extension works more financially appealing than changing home”.

Dr Kumar, an environmental engineer, carried out 20 different building activities and collected and analysed the dust created.

So-called ultrafine particles, up to 70 000 times thinner than a human hair, made up 97 percent of the particles in the dust. Their small size is thought to make them dangerous because it allows them to travel deep into the lungs, where they may trigger cancer. It is also feared that they can worm their way into the bloodstream, where they contribute to a hardening of the arteries.

DIY increases the number of ultrafine particles in the air by up to 4 000 times, the study found.

Traditionally, concerns about building dust have focused on visible particles which fuel breathing problems such as asthma. Drilling and wall chasing, in which grooves for cables are cut in walls, seemed to produce particularly high levels of ultrafine particles. Sanding, cementing and welding may also release high concentrations, the Journal of Nanoparticle Research reports.

Dr Kumar said: “The market for DIY refurbishment is growing. Our research shows that we need more regulatory guidelines, not only to protect construction workers, but also to protect the general public.”

But Professor Paul Cullinan, a respiratory disease expert at Imperial College London, said the study wasn’t an excuse to get out of DIY.

He said the findings applied to professional builders and those who merely dabbled would not be exposed to dust for long enough or often enough.

Daily Mail

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