New Research May Explain Why Firefighters Are Prone to Certain Cancers

[script src=”https://CBSCHI.images.worldnow.com/interface/js/WNVideo.js?rnd=484209;hostDomain=video.chicago.cbslocal.com;playerWidth=620;playerHeight=349;isShowIcon=true;clipId=11257396;flvUri=;partnerclipid=;adTag=News;advertisingZone=CBS.CHI%252Fworldnowplayer;enableAds=true;landingPage=;islandingPageoverride=false;playerType=STANDARD_EMBEDDEDscript;controlsType=overlay”]

 

Reasons may be clearer now about why firefighters have higher rates of certain types of cancers.

CBS 2’s Chris Martinez previously reported on a study that showed firefighters are at-risk. The study also found Chicago firefighters are more than twice as likely to develop them.

The research looked at firefighters’ exposure to chemicals released when home burn and their exposure after.

“Some of them range from known carcinogens to possible or potential carcinogens,” Gavin Horn of the Illinois Fire Service Institute says.

Horn is a co-author of a study involving Chicago firefighters that measured levels of certain chemicals coming off their gear 25 minutes after the fire. Researchers also tested firefighters’ breath.

The study found known cancer-causing chemicals, benzene and styrene, were at more than five times higher than pre-burn levels coming off their gear. It also found those same chemicals more than two times higher in the firefighters’ breath.

“The concern is repeated exposure to these as well, over a career or multiple fires, it could become a significant problem,” Horn says.

Hand entrapped in rope gripper

Elevator Rescue: Rope Gripper Entrapment

Mike Dragonetti discusses operating safely while around a Rope Gripper and two methods of mitigating an entrapment situation.
Delta explosion

Two Workers Killed, Another Injured in Explosion at Atlanta Delta Air Lines Facility

Two workers were killed and another seriously injured in an explosion Tuesday at a Delta Air Lines maintenance facility near the Atlanta airport.