• Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Statement
  • Site Map
  • Links

Occupational Health And Safety Reps. Information, Advice, Support...Speaking Up Together

Ask
Renata
 All Site    SafetyNET
  • Subscribe
  • Tell a friend
  • Change font
    • A
    • A
    • A
    • A
  • Print this page
  • Save this page
  • Hazards
    • Asbestos
      • Asbestos in the home
      • Asbestos in the workplace
    • Asthma
    • Biological Hazards
    • Bullying & Violence
    • Call Centres
    • Chemicals
    • Fatigue & Impairment
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Nanotechnology
    • Noise
    • Plant
    • Radiation
    • Slips, Trips and Falls
    • Strains and Sprains
    • Stress
    • Vibration
    • Workplace Conditions
  • Law & Rights
    • Law
      • The OHS Act
      • Regulations
      • Compliance Codes
      • Codes of Practice (1985 Act)
      • Comcare
      • Model OHS Law
    • Rights
      • OHS Reps' Rights
      • Workers' Rights
  • News & Views
    • Media Releases
      • Subscribe
      • Media Releases Archive
    • International NewsWire
    • Features
    • People in OHS
    • Campaigns
      • Asbestos Awareness
      • International Workers Memorial Day
      • Zero Occupational Cancer
      • Behaviour Based Safety
      • International RSI Day
      • It's time to deliver
    • Your Say
    • OHS Reps Conferences
      • OHS Reps Conference 2005
      • OHS Reps Conference 2006
      • OHS Reps Conference 2007
      • OHS Reps Conference 2008
      • OHS Reps Conference 2009
      • OHS Reps Conference 2010
      • OHS Reps Conference 2011
  • FAQs
    • Asbestos
    • Electrical Safety
    • Workplace and Amenities
    • FAQs for OHS Reps
    • FAQs for Workers
    • Other
  • SafetyNet Journal
    • Current Issue
    • Subscribe
    • Un Subscribe
    • SafetyNet JOURNAL Archive
      • SafetyNet 2012
      • SafetyNet 2011
      • SafetyNet 2010
      • SafetyNet 2009
      • SafetyNet 2008
      • SafetyNet 2007
      • SafetyNet 2006
      • SafetyNet 2005
      • SafetyNet 2004
      • SafetyNet 2003
      • SafetyNet 2002
  • Your Industry
    • Construction & Utilities
    • Education
    • Government (local, State)
    • Health & Community Services
    • Hospitality
    • Labour Hire
    • Manufacturing
    • Mining
    • Office/Admin
    • Rural
    • Service Industry
    • Transport, Storage & Trade
  • Training
    • Subscribe to Training News
  • ToolKit
    • Behaviour Based Safety Programs
    • Mapping
    • How to...
    • Checklists

Hazards

  • Asbestos
    • Asbestos in the home
    • Asbestos in the workplace
  • Asthma
  • Biological Hazards
  • Bullying & Violence
  • Call Centres
  • Chemicals
  • Fatigue & Impairment
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Nanotechnology
  • Noise
  • Plant
  • Radiation
  • Slips, Trips and Falls
  • Strains and Sprains
  • Stress
  • Vibration
  • Workplace Conditions
 
  • Home
  • Hazards
  •  > Biological Hazards

Anthrax

Be Aware – Anthrax

There were headlines on 6 February, 2007 about an anthrax outbreak and a meat worker being hospitalised (The Herald Sun, Feb 6, 2007).  The following is a Newsletter produced by the OHS Officer at the Meatworkers Union (AMIEU) for their members.

So what is anthrax?

It is a serious disease caused by Bacillus anthracis, a bacterium that forms spores. A bacterium is a very small organism made up of one cell. Many bacteria can cause diseases. A spore is a cell that is dormant (asleep) but may come to life with the right conditions. There are three types of anthrax, depending on how it gets in:

  • skin (cutaneous)
  • lungs (inhalation)
  • digestive (gastrointestinal).

Farmers rarely observe signs of anthrax in pastured cattle that have died. They are generally unaware of the presence of anthrax and attribute the death to other diseases. It is not uncommon for the first signs of anthrax being present on a farm to be when a person develops anthrax from butchering an infected carcass.

If animals have been infected but been sent to an abattoir when they are still able to walk in, there could be risk. There can be risk also from carcasses being sent to knackeries or skin sheds or for rendering to produce blood and bone. Does your abattoir get crackers directly from dairy farms in the Stanhope area? Or does the skin shed or rendering get the carcases from around Shepparton? If so, read on.

Be Aware.

When the animals get anthrax it is usually by eating the grass roots in an area where the spores are in the ground and it is hot and dry. It is less common but they could get the disease by breathing in spores in the dust or getting in through skin wounds from grass seeds. Initially the disease develops slowly, but once the anthrax bacilli get into the blood they multiply quickly and continue until the death of the animal.

A Zoonotic Disease

As an occupational disease for workers it is mostly a skin infection from contact with the infected animals, their by-products or infected soil. It is less common but could come from breathing in the spores in dust or getting it into the mouth and swallowed.

The symptoms (warning signs) of anthrax are different depending on the type of the disease:

  • Skin: The first symptom is a small sore that develops into a blister. The blister then develops into a skin ulcer with a black area in the centre. The sore, blister and ulcer do not hurt.
  • Lungs: The first symptoms of inhalation anthrax are like cold or flu symptoms and can include a sore throat, mild fever and muscle aches. Later symptoms include cough, chest discomfort, shortness of breath, tiredness and muscle aches.
  • Gut: The first symptoms are nausea, loss of appetite, bloody diarrhoea, and fever, followed by bad stomach pain.

Symptoms can appear within 7 days of coming into contact with the bacterium for all three types of anthrax. For inhalation anthrax, symptoms can appear within a week or can take up to 42 days to appear.

If you are showing these symptoms, call your own Doctor right away, see them, tell them that you deal with cattle from the Shepparton region and get anthrax checked out. Anthrax can be treated with antibiotics. But, if it is not treated, it can kill people as well as animals.

If you were to get infected with anthrax, you would be entitled to WorkCover. In order to get it you would need a WorkCover Certificate from the Doctor and a Claim Form (that you can get from the Union or a Post Office). If the paperwork is not lodged, your long term interests are not protected.

There is a vaccine also. Remember, the troops who were sent to the Middle East were vaccinated. If any infected beasts have made it into your workplace, you should call your Organiser.. Make sure that WorkSafe know. They can be called on 1800 136 089. Collectively consider requesting that the vaccine be offered.

Don’t panic -  but be aware.

More Hazard

  • Biological Agents

    General information on the range of biological agents workers can come in contact with....read more

  • Mould

    Mould growth indoors can have harmful effects on both property and the health of the people inside....read more

  • Crippled by damp classroom

    A mouldy classroom left one teacher with debilitating health problems....read more