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W A Bloor and his career in Occupational Hygiene | Print |

by David M Bloor

My father, Wilf Bloor, was one of the early occupational hygienists in the UK and as a consequence I was, I think, the first second-generation occupational hygienist in the UK, though there are a few more now.

Occupational hygiene (also known as industrial hygiene) is defined as the practice of identifying hazardous agents; Chemical, Physical and Biological; in the workplace that could cause disease or discomfort, evaluating the extent of the risk due to exposure to these hazardous agents, and ensuring control of those risks to prevent ill-health in the long or short term.

After studying Ceramics at the North Staffordshire Technical College my father was appointed the British Pottery  Manufacturers Federation Research Scholar from 1936 to 1938. This was a post created and funded by the BPMF who were concerned about the incidence of dust  related diseases in their industries. His job was to investigate dust conditions in the industry.

WAB (in centre background) air sampling in 1937The work was carried out by a team of three including a Factory  Inspector. The measurements were made using some of the first commercially available thermal precipitators for collecting personal samples for  particle counting. Salicylic acid filters were used to collect static samples and analysed by petrological and chemical methods to determine silica content.  The results of this work were published in 1939 in the Transactions of the British Ceramic Society.

From 1938 until the end of the war my father  worked at the Worksop plant of General Refractories, who were engaged in  producing refractories for the then vital iron and steel industry.

After the war  he moved to the British Iron and Steel Research Association in Sheffield and  there went back to work in Occupational Hygiene. He was co-author of 5 papers on  dust measurement in foundries and evaluation of local exhaust ventilation  systems in the 1951 HMSO publication 'Dust in Steel Foundries' and author of a paper on dust reduction  methods for the Institute of British Foundrymen.

In 1951 he returned to his roots and took up a post at the British Ceramic Research Association at Penkhull, where he was  responsible for setting up and leading a research unit specifically to  investigate dust control in the Pottery Industry. At this time there were over  200 newly diagnosed cases a year of pneumoconiosis in Stoke-on-Trent. When he  retired in 1980 that had been reduced to single figures, an achievement he was  proud to have been part of.

Despite of the large number of measurements  he and his team made over the years he considered that the introduction of the  Tyndall Beam, as a tool in visualising dust particles, was a break through in  the development of control measures. One of the most important observations was  that, despite the use of early designs of exhaust hoods, much of the dust  entering the breathing zone of pottery workers was being generated from their  cotton clothing. At BCRA he and his team tested many fabrics and clothing  designs to provide protective clothing which did not increase exposure. Together  with fabric manufacturers they developed what is still known as 'Ceramic Surface  Terylene', this had a surface texture and weave which did not retain dust or  allow dust to penetrate it while still allowing sufficient 'breathability' to be  comfortable to wear. The material was combined with well thought out designs  which minimised seams and other dust retaining features on the front of the  garments. The material and designs were still in use in potteries world-wide  until very recently when research on some new fabrics showed ones with even  better performance. The Tyndall Beam also showed up the inefficiency of the  local exhaust and general ventilation systems then available and lead to the  development of standards for these by BCRA. Together with the other advances  made in the ceramic industry there followed a dramatic reduction in the number  of cases of dust related diseases.    

He was involved in numerous committees, both of trade associations and professional  bodies. As chairman of the Section of Occupational Health and Preventative  Medicine of the North Staffs Medical Institute he was the first non-physician to  hold that post. He was committed to the furthering of the profession of Occupational Hygiene  and was for many years a visiting lecturer in Occupational Hygiene to the London  School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

My father was  an early member of both British Occupational Hygiene Society and the Institute of Occupational  Hygienists (which became BIOH in 1997 and  merged with the Society again in 2003). He was one of the early Fellows of the  Institute and the first Honorary  Fellow, as well serving a term as  vice-president.  

While a student I worked in  my father's departmant at BCRA for three summer vacations. Being the boss's   son had advantages and disadvantages. I had  to start as early as he did and finish as  late, but at least I was sure of a ride home at the end of   the day.     My father felt  it was important that everyone working in his department understood the background to the  work we were doing, even lowly vacation  technicians like myself, so my lunch breaks were spent   reading Hunter's 'Diseases of Occupations'  and browsing though Patty and the ILO Health  and Safety Encyclopaedia and asking questions where I didn't  understand.    

One thing my  father did insist on in his department was the use of  hard- backed field notebooks. He often used to  quote a maxim that one of his early mentors  had as a poster on the laboratory wall - "Notebooks have   good memories and so do scraps of paper - if  you can find them." This was reinforced  in my mind by the visit to my father's office of a lawyer   who wanted him to act as an expert witness in  a case involving exposure to silica  dating back to the late 1930's. My father was able to walk   straight to his files and refer to his  notebooks from surveys of that time.

 
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