Science
Lab accident leaves student uninjured
He says an instructor wouldn’t allow him to
use the eye wash after he got non-toxic chemicals in his face.
By Brandon
Pope February 12, 2004
Contributor to The Shorthorn
A nursing junior says a teaching assistant prevented
him from using an eyewash station after exposure to chemicals in a Life Science
Building laboratory. He says his safety was put at risk because the teaching
assistant did not want to risk flooding the lab.
The lab supervisor says the chemicals used in the general microbiology lab
experiment were harmless and that the incident was “hyped up.”
The student, David Green, said he accidentally dropped a bottle of crystal
violet stain used to make bacteria visible under a microscope, and the chemical
— indelible but not toxic — sloshed in his face.
“The chemical splashed all over my face — it got into my hair, my eyes, my
mouth. And to top it off, my shirt was ruined,” Green said. When helped by
friends to an eye-flushing station, Green said the teaching assistant interceded
and directed him out the lab door into the hall toward a drinking water
fountain.
“She said something about the room would be flooded because there is no
drain,” he said. “[She] did not even ask if I was okay or if I was hurt and
would not let me use the eyewash machine.”
The commotion in the hall drew the attention of the lab supervisor, Michelle
Badon, who was working in her office.
“Apparently, there was some sort of confusion about being able to use the
eyewash machine. I directed him back to the eyewash machine and helped him use
it,” Dr. Badon said.
Neither Green nor two other students in the class knew the teaching
assistant’s name. Badon said she would not release it.
Badon said she asked Green if he needed medical attention and he declined. She
heard later he had visited the Health Services center.
“I asked him if he was okay and if he needed to go to the health center
several times, but he refused,” she said. “I wanted to make sure I did
everything by the book, so when I found out he went to the doctor after class I
made sure I faxed the material safety data sheets.”
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration requires workplaces to keep a
copy of the data sheets within easy access of anyone working.
The violet stain is harmless beyond Green’s purple-splotched face, and the
color should fade in “two to three days,” Badon said. “It’s just dye.”
Biology junior June Chung was in the class and said the stain seemed benign.
“I think he was just more upset than anything,” Chung said. “It’s not
like anything that’s going to kill him.”
Nevertheless, she said, it could have been injurious if it had been a different
chemical and the teaching assistant had reacted the same way.
Green said, “It could have been hydrochloric acid.”
— Brad Rollins contributed to this article.