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#1 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:13:00(UTC)
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Posted By PDA
Can anyone tell me if there is a immediate danger when working near pigeon droppings? If for instance a contractor was removing pigeon droppings on a roof (apart from the working at height obv!). My limited knowledge could only think there may be a danger of pigeons carrying leptospirosis?

Is there anywhere i could look for this kind of information?
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#2 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:14:00(UTC)
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Posted By Jonathan Breeze
Psittacosis is the disease to look out for.
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#3 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:19:00(UTC)
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Posted By BethR
My advice, get a specialist in to remove it. we don't let any of our men near it and get an environmental company into remove it (obviously depending how much there is!!!)
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#4 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:30:00(UTC)
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Posted By Doug Kelly
You could do a search on www.cdc.gov

or the previous thread:
www.iosh.co.uk/index.cfm...iew&forum=1&thread=15609 - 18k

I believe the possible outcome of messing with this stuff is pretty nasty so would recommend going to a specialist.
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#5 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:47:00(UTC)
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Posted By Brett Day

Having had Psittacosis, I can honestly say that it's something to avoid.
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#6 Posted : 21 May 2008 11:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Jonathan Breeze
The second link by Doug should read:

http://www.iosh.co.uk/in...iew&forum=1&thread=15609

Hope this helps.
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#7 Posted : 21 May 2008 12:37:00(UTC)
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Posted By Bob Youel

Q-fever is one area to think about as we paid out £5k to a person not long ago who was constantly exposed to such droppings in large qualtities

Common sense should be used at all times and the case noted above was unique considering the events surrounding it
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#8 Posted : 21 May 2008 13:16:00(UTC)
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Posted By William
I can remember reading that years ago the pigeons or gulls near sellafield had radioactive droppings, I suppose it all depends where you are.
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#9 Posted : 21 May 2008 15:05:00(UTC)
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Posted By PDA
Thank you all for your help.

I rang the HSE directly earlier (before i had chance to look back on here).

They refereed me to some guidance they have called 'Farm Wise'. It can be found here: http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/misc165.pdf

This has a section on birds and specifically pigeons (i haven't had chance to read yet but this is what i am told by the HSE). It states to carry out a thorough risk assessment and provide PPE for the job. They did not mention specifics such as RPE etc but obviously this would be beneficial in the protection of workers.
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