Hans,
My issue is that, at least here in NZ, the employer or institution has full responsibility for ensuring relevant safety information and resources are available, includes specialist experts, for all workplace hazards.
I also doubt that many chemists can even locate and identify the relevant toxicity information ( especially for novel compounds ), much less perform the calculations necessary to establish safe occupational exposures and identify the most appropriate PPE and containment. Not many chemists routinely work with cytocabinets.
Down here, chemists are not multi-skilled, hence organisations must provide access to specialist experts to help ascertain hazards and quantify risks. I would expect my institution to provide all the information before working with cytotoxins, chemical/biological warfare agents, radiochemicals, etc.,
Once the hazards have been identified, and the resources provided, the workers have responsibilities to adhere to all agreed protocols, otherwise instant dismissal is an option.
For example, I've worked on several cytotoxin programmes where females of child-bearing age have been excluded from working with any quantity ( even ng ) of the chemicals, and all staff have to undergo special medical examination for any symptoms every few months.
Those decision were made by medial staff and industrial hygienists, not chemists. If the institution had not provided those rules, it's quite likely the chemist and managers would have just continued on.....
I doubt that few chemists would suggest that Karen Wetterhahn was not a oustanding chemist, but using the wrong glove material was fatal.
From another place and time....
" A review of death certificates of members of the Royal Institute of
Chemistry who died between 1965-1975, indicated elevated numbers
cancers, especially lymphomas.
A subsequent review of deaths between 1965-1989 confirmed the increase in lymphatic and hematopoietic cancers, in particular leukemias. There was also increased mortality from some gastrointestinal cancers, cancers of the duodenum and kidney, some skin cancers, mental disorders, and diseases of the nervous system.
A review of the cause of death for 3637 members of the American Chemical Society who died 1948-1967 revealed that chemists die at unusually high rates from suicide, cancer of the pancreas, and cancers of the lymph system (malignant lymphomas).
The study indicated an increased death rate for working age male chemists ( 444 deaths ), when compared to non-chemist professionals of the same age ( 354 expected ) with approx 50% of excess deaths attributed to pancreatic cancer. Older chemists ( 65+ ) had unusually high rates of leukemia, malignant lymphoma, and pancreatic cancer."
There are old chemists and bold chemists, but not many old and bold chemists.
Bruce Hamilton