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perfume in the work place
Charlene Dulyea
Wednesday, March 26, 2008 at 09:26 AMre: perfume in the work place
Pat
Wednesday, April 23, 2008 at 11:31 PMI also have allergies and asthma that are very symptomatic in the workplace. I agree with you as to the inconvenience and expense in proving your own case. I had to undergo allergy testing and several lphysician appointments (co-payments for office visits and prescriptions that cause financial drains!).
One of my former colleagues used to freshen up her fragrance and hair spray at her desk during the day, and I found that she was exceptionally approachable and understanding when I explained to her that while I did find her fragrance pleasant, it was causing severe reactions with my asthma. She was surprised by this, and said she wished she had known earlier. She made it a point to stop wearing and refreshing her fragrance in the office. She was so considerate once she understood that it was a health issue for me.
I found that co-workers were more sympathetic and more accommodating than the 'office management' and 'corporate real estate' with their stringent requirements on documentation to prove that an issue exists. They cannot rely on our word for this, and it is exceptionally frustrating. Co-workers can make an immediate difference.
I believe that if you present your situation to your co-worker in a neutral manner (they feel offended possibly, and that causes them to be defensive potentially!) and explain that this is not something you have control over, and how you would feel upset too if you did not have the freedom to wear what you wanted to...... perhaps you would gain cooperation as I did. This was the fastest solution for me while the other parts were being worked through.
I am still working on getting better each day, but one other thing worth mentioning is this: there is power in your physician's note that states while you continue to have symptoms exacerbated by inhaled irritants, your office must- MUST provide an atmosphere that is not threatening to your health. Once I brought in my Dr. note and presented a copy to my HR representative/ department, the corrective action happened quickly.
Good luck !
Pat
re: perfume in the work place
aliciazim
Friday, May 29, 2009 at 10:40 AMThis perfume problem isn't just in the workplace. I can't go to church and sit there for an hour (sometimes an hour and a half) because everyone around me wears some type of perfume--whether it's actual perfume, hair spray, hair products, whatever. If I can smell you when you walk by me in the grocery store, it's too much. I get SEVERE MIGRAINES as a result of these strong smells. Why do I have to suffer because people are clueless and think they live on an island where their actions don't affect anyone?? I am desperate to find a group that educates the general public on the adverse effects of perfumey smells on those sensitive to them. If anyone finds such a group, please email me at aliciazim@yahoo.com.
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More on fragrances
Vicki Z
Wednesday, April 16, 2008 at 06:38 PMI am a prisoner in my own home because of my allergy to fragrances and my asthma. I have had so many resperatory infections from exposure to them that I now have COPD and am on oxygen 24/7. Here are some real points of safety concerns for me.
I am on long term care. It has been two years since I was approved for it and only 3 weeks ago had a provider come to my home who had no fragrances on her. The case manager/nurse comes with fragrances. The oxygen delivery person comes with fragrances. The person who delivers frozen meals for me comes with fragrances. The resperatory therapist who does my lung function testing for my o2 certification comes with fragrances. I was shuffled from one Home Health Care company to another because I could not tolerate the fragrances. When I spoke with the people at the state level they said that they could not require a person to come to work fragrance free.
Hospitals: Ambulance Attendants: Doctors: Nurses: Custodial Staff: Support Staff: Resperatory Therapists... The little care packages that the volunteers give to all the patients with the soaps and lotions. By the time everyone has sampled theirs the entire unit has been contaminated with fragrance chemicals. Many of these people get downright mean when you try to get them to understand that you just cannot be anywhere near fragrances. In fact a volunteer clinic would loose my sign in sheet if I tried to get it in first so I could get in and out without sitting in a room with fifty or more people who had a variety of fragrances on each one. I would leave without my meds and would have a resperatory infection within a week. Then they changed the policy so you could not see a doctor more than once every three months so I could not get treatment for the infection. I finally got approved for SSI and was put on medicaid. It did not stop there though. None of the clinics or doctors would accept medicaid so I had to rely on the emergency room of the local hospital. They would prescribe meds that they knew medicaid would not pay for and I could not pay for. I had pneumonia for five months before I was taken to an ER in another city miles away and was in the Critical Care Unit for 10 days. When I was to be released I begged the doctors to take me on as a regular patient. One of the residents finally agreed. What I really need is to go to an Asthma and Allergy Clinic and a Pulmonologist who will help me with my quality of life. The only allergy medicine that has brought me any degree of relief is Allegra and medicaid will not pay for it or the generic form of it for monitary reasons. Seems like it costs more for a stay in the critical care unit of a hospital than years worth of monthly Allegra prescriptions.
Doctors Offices.... The staff and the doctors. Sitting in the waiting room with other patients who use fragranced products.
Grocery Stores.... Stockers put on lotions, perfumes, after shave, etc. and then handle the products. You pick it up to put it in your cart and you get the stuff on your hands and it does not wash off. Foods in boxes and plastic bags smell and taste like a soup of all the fragrances on them and in the air of the store. Cashiers and baggers with fragrances on their hands and body. Getting stuck in a check out line with people who use fragrances products.
Buying fragrance free products but having to go into the same area of the store as all the fragranced products to get them. Getting the fragranced free products home only to discover they are contaminated with fragrance from the products they were stored with in the warehouse and in the stores.
Checking the mail: Again, the people who stuff the envelopes and mail handlers with fragrances products on their hands. The accumulation of fragrances in the air where the paper and envelopes have been. This seems to particularily true of utility and other bills coming on a regular basis.
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asthma
Anonymous
Thursday, May 08, 2008 at 12:07 AMwhoever wants to try, my son has asthma and never got anywhere with the bought and paid for drug pushers, we went to a naturopathic doctor and she recommended getting off dairy and adding some natural medicines along side of the artificial ones and he is doing much better, I believe naturals will always be superior to anything artificial, check out astaxanthin too, best of health
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re: Perfume in the workplace
Susan Russo
Thursday, June 05, 2008 at 03:45 PMOn Feb. 15, I came back from vacation, unlocked my office and that was the start of a "perfect storm"...2 co-workers came into my office within 20 minutes of one another and I ended up being rushed by ambulance to the ER with an "acute bronchospasm"...4 days later had another attack which put my in the hospital for 5 days, during which time I was diagnosed with asthma...I'm still not back to work, I now react to all sorts of triggers, have symptoms every day, am on 6 medications and no income. I've had 2 more acute attacks, ending up in the ER.
If this had been the first time I had a brochospasm at work due to one or another trigger - perfume, cleaning solution, air freshener spray, sanitizing spray, I wouldn't be so upset, but, per my doctor, I have asked management on 2 occasions to request that people not use these products when I am there...the request fell on deaf ears even though they witnessed me having to use an inhaler 6-8 times in the 5 months prior to the big attack. Not wanting to "upset the apple cart", I didn't push the issue....boy do I wish I had!! If anyone out there reads this and sees a similarity to their own situation...PUSH THE ISSUE !!! It's your quality of life, if not your life itself at stake.
re: re: Perfume in the workplace
Diane Saunders-Deslandes
Monday, December 29, 2008 at 02:47 PMThis year I joined AAFA out of frustration of coming across soooo m-a-n-y situations where poor indoor airquality has affected my exercise regimen-post total knee replacement, my place of work, indoor recreational facilities, etc. I lived in Boston, MA for a number of years and now reside in Connecticut. Regarding your comment on perfumes, in another life I held a position with a couture fashion company and learned from experts about the chemical composition of perfumes. At that time, I learned that several perfumes manufactured in the United States tend to be produced with a number of synthetic ingredients. Those manufactured i.e. in Europe for the most part tend to be produced with actual floral or herbal extracts. For asthmatics, I can appreciate how all of these ingredients could potentially trigger an attack depending on which allergens or triggers the asthmatic individual would test positive. Before I developed asthma, once exposed to a synthetic based perfume I would develop a painful sinus headache. Once I developed asthma, I could not tollerate being around synthetic perfumes at all.
In reference to communicating with employers, health club facility mangers and the like re: managing your asthma, I'm going share with you an experience I had with a physical therapy facility, for post total knee replacement excercise. In that situation, I discovered that one of the back doors to the facility was left open and both cold air and car emissions entered the facility through the same back door located next to an overhand parking lot. My approach with discussing asthma concerns with people is...3 strikes and your out. On three different occasions, I approached management personnel of the facility to politely remind them I'm diagnosed with asthma, and that it can be managed successfully with recommendations per my Allergy and Asthma Specialist i.e., reduce my exposure to specific allergens or triggers, and pointed out to them the concern about 2 asthma triggers cold air, and car emissions entering the space. Their reactions included dismissing asthma as being "in my head." Then I pulled some information I researched and included it in a comprehensive document/letter that explains asthma with the approach of educating the reader re: the following:
*What is Asthma-in my travels here in Connecticut there are m-a-n-y people including even healthcare related professionals who are NOT familiar with what it takes to manage asthma.
*What are Asthma Triggers,
*What are Asthma Symptoms-with accurate descriptions,
*Asthma and Exercise in Winter,
*Indoor Humidity levels recommended for Asthmatics, and
*Suggestions to Manage Indoor Air Quality.
*Asthma Management Program-an outline of what my asthma specialist recommends I do to manage asthma: medication, treatment, anti-allergen bedding, anti-allergen car filter, air purifier with filter, a/c with use of filters, and..all here mentioned filters changed each month, etc., etc(!).
What's important here is that with each topic I refer to foot notes of credible information on asthma from sources via the internet, i.e., AAFA of course, New York Presbyterian Hospital/Weil Cornell Medical Center in New York City-great patient information on managing asthma in cold winter months, American Academy of Asthma and Immunology, Centers for Disease Control, New England Journal of Medicine, etc. Copies of that foot noted information were included in the document. In this manner, I presented to them a STUDY on asthma that points to the fact that it is a disease that is to be taken seriously. The credible information helps to underscore that.
Hope this is helpful. I can certain appreciate the frustration of trying to get people to understand asthma so we can manage it successfully.
Diane
Newtown, CT
re: re: re: Perfume in the workplace
gepe
Monday, September 14, 2009 at 01:52 AMI'll add my 3 cents.I too have to agree some people BATHE in perfume.I've had asthma since 1993 and I'm bothered by strong smells,not just perfume.I can't handle most cleaning products,so I buy the cheap watered down kind at the $1.00 store......these I can use.I know most people like to wear fragances,men & women and most I can stand if they've been used in moderation,but SOME people can't do that......why I don't know.It's like if you can't smell it from 500 ft away they aren't happy.I think it's rude and inconsiderate to SOAK yourself in fragance to point of reeking with it.
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I have a battle going on right now at work about a co-worker's perfume.
If most work places are now smoke free, why can't they be perfume free
as well? I am so tired of feeling great until I get to work and have to
suffer all day long. I have made my bosses aware of the problem and am
now being forced to face the expense of allergy tests to prove my point.
I have left work early several times because of my reacction to her perfume.
I will continue to suffer every day until I can schedule appointments and prove
that this is a real problem. Since I work for a municipalty, I will then have to
wait for the results, get this issue placed on the agenda for a commission meeting
and hopefully get a policy passed to ban perfume from the work place. All the
while I suffer eight hours a day, five days a week.
Charlene