| UPDATED: APHA Calls for Action on Toxic Exposure in Electronics Industry | | Print | |
| Written by Chelsey Drysdale | |||
| Tuesday, 30 October 2012 22:25 | |||
|
WASHINGTON – The American Public Health Association today called on the global electronics’ industry, public health officials and international agencies to step up efforts to protect workers and communities, citing well documented adverse health effects caused by many toxic chemicals used in the manufacture of electronic and electrical products worldwide. In making its recommendations, APHA noted the increase in the production and use of electrical and electronic products, including a global supply chain that works through a complicated web of subcontractors, often located in Asia. “Weak, or nonexistent regulations, lack of information about the chemicals to which they are being exposed, insufficient oversight, and a failure to consistently report and track disease patterns associated with the industry compound the problem in many Asian manufacturing facilities,” explained Dr. Jeong-ok Kong, an occupational health physician with the Korean Institute of Labor, Safety and Health in Korea, who presented data indicating high incidence of cancer among Samsung workers there. “Unfortunately the response of the industry is often to continue the harm by exploiting scientific uncertainty and promoting weak policies under the guise of ‘sound science.’” Presentations at the APHA conference documented adverse health outcomes due to exposure to hazardous chemicals in the electronics industry in China, Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, and elsewhere. Some of the health impacts and patterns cited in the APHA resolution include cancers, lung disease, reproductive disorders, congenital anomalies in offspring and musculoskeletal problems from repetitive motion tasks. Companies named in the resolution include Acer, Advanced Micro Devices, Apple, Dell, AU Optronics, Hewlett Packard, Hon Hai (Foxconn), HTC, Intel, Lenovo, LG, Samsung, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, and Young Fast Optoelectronics. APHA endorsed three strategies to strengthen occupational and environmental health in the electronics industry, including the right of workers and communities to know the identities and hazards of chemicals they are being exposed to and ways to protect themselves; when the costs of chemical pollution, clean-up, and adverse health effects on individuals and communities are factored into product cost analyses, it becomes clear that the most effective way to address hazardous chemicals in manufacturing electronic products is to use safer chemical and non-chemical alternatives; APHA endorses the use of health surveillance that would include collection of data, analysis, and dissemination of information about injuries, illnesses, hazards and exposures in the electronics sector, with full access for workers to monitoring protocols and results, as well as medical records.
|
Design News
- FabStream, ADI Offer Digi-Key Parts Library
- DRAM Market Getting Tight
- Ansys Sets Q1 Revenue Mark
- EI SiP Meets Missile Interceptor Challenge
- Sweden to Host SI Workshops
- Altium Signs Fisher/Unitech as Midwest US VAR
- NI's Revenue Jump Can't Save Profits
- 2013 PCD&F NPI Design Awards Open
- PCB Designers Roundtable: ‘Trust, But Verify’
- Cadence Posts Q1 Revenue Up 12%
Market News
- Medical Electronics Market to Double, Offering Ample Opps for EMS
- IT Market Being Pulled Down by PC Sluggishness
- Tablet Sales Surged in Q1
- Smartphone Shipments Up 38% in Q1
- IPC: March PCB Orders Down 2.3%
- Solid Forecast for Enterprise Network Equipment Spending
- IC, Packaging Sales to Grow through 2017
- Driver-Assist Systems Market Going Fast on Own
- Study Says US on Track to Compete with China on Cost
- March Semi Spending Better than Last Month, But Not Last Year
Fab News
- SMTA, IPC to Co-locate Fall Events
- LPKF Posts Q1 Revenue Up 60%
- Despite Sequester, Aurora Circuits Reports Q1 Sales Up 12%
- Rogers Restructuring to Cut Annual Spending by $12M
- DoD to Propose Changes to Counterfeit Electronics Procurement Practices
- Cambridge Nanotherm to Build 1st Manufacturing Plant
- Ex Jisso Members Re-Form Under CAMEST Banner
- April Not Cruelest Month for Park
- NIST Publishes Information Security Standard
- Foxconn's April Sales Lower Despite Handset Demand
Products
Vault 1.1 features enhanced searching and filtering tools and design bill of materials for easy-to-use component navigation.
Features
A series of workshops next month on compliance with RoHS and other directives will help US companies looking to break into the European market.
