INTRODUCTION
Almost everyone occasionally suffers common symptoms such as headaches, dry throat or sore eyes. But there are occasions when people in particular buildings experience these sorts of symptoms more often than is usual. Symptoms tend to increase in severity with the time spent in the building and improve over time, or disappear when the person is away from the building. This is often described as Sick Building Syndrome (SBS). The symptoms include:
· eye, nose and throat irritation
· stuffy or runny nose
· dry or itchy skin or skin rash
· headaches, lethargy, irritability, poor concentration
· nausea and dizziness
Symptoms are generally mild, although they may affect personal performance and motivation, sometimes significantly. Sick Building Syndrome is not a recognised illness that can be diagnosed precisely.
CAUSATIVE FACTORS
SBS is likely to be due to a combination of factors, the relative importance of which will vary between premises. They can be broadly categorised into:
1. Physical or environmental factors, e.g. ventilation; cleaning and maintenance; workstation layout.
2. Job factors, e.g. the variety and interest of particular jobs; people's ability to control certain aspects of work and their working environment. Factors may include:
· Building and office design
- open plan offices with more than about 10 workstations;
- large areas of soft furnishing, open shelving, filing;
- new carpets or furniture and freshly painted surfaces.
· Building services and maintenance
- air conditioning;
- lighting (glare and flicker in particular);
- low level of user control;
- poor design and maintenance/repair;
- insufficient or badly organised cleaning.
· Indoor environment and air quality
- high temperatures and excessive variations (e.g. draughts);
- very low or high humidity;
- chemical pollutants (e.g. ozone; tobacco smoke);
- dust/fibres in the atmosphere;
- noise.
· Job factors
- routine clerical work
- work with display screen equipment