Civil engineers have used compressed air to stabilise wet ground for over 150 years and continue to do so. But since 2001, compressed-air workers in the UK can no longer decompress on air alone—it now has to be done with the aid of oxygen. Despite one of the strictest regulatory environments in the world, Britain's construction industry recorded 428 cases of decompression illness between 1984 and 2002, leading to air-only decompression being banned. This paper provides an analysis of the UK's uniquely comprehensive database of compressed air exposure and decompression illness records which led to the ban. It provides a benchmark for assessing the effectiveness of oxygen decompression as well as informing other countries considering making the change.
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November 2006
Research Article|
November 01 2006
Acute decompression illness in UK tunnelling Available to Purchase
Donald Lamont, MEng, CEng, FICE, FIHT, FCIWEM;
Donald Lamont, MEng, CEng, FICE, FIHT, FCIWEM
Principal construction engineering inspector at the UK Health and Safety Executive in Bootle
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Richard Booth, PhD, CEng, DIC, FIMechE, CFIOSH
Richard Booth, PhD, CEng, DIC, FIMechE, CFIOSH
Professor in the mechanical engineering department at Aston University, Birmingham, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1751-7672
Print ISSN: 0965-089X
© 2006 Thomas Telford Ltd
2006
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering (2006) 159 (4): 185–191.
Citation
Lamont D, Booth R (2006), "Acute decompression illness in UK tunnelling". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Civil Engineering, Vol. 159 No. 4 pp. 185–191, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/cien.2006.159.4.185
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