Alberta fire fighters raising awareness about cancer dangers this month
Alberta’s fire fighters are speaking up this month about the single greatest danger they face while protecting the lives and property of their fellow citizens.
January is Fire Fighter Cancer Awareness Month, and the Alberta Fire Fighters Association (AFFA), along with its affiliates are highlighting the toll the disease has taken on the profession, and are sharing information about how fire fighters can reduce their risks of contracting one of the many cancers scientifically linked to firefighting.
“Cancer is an epidemic in the fire service. It’s the leading cause of line-of-duty deaths among Alberta fire fighters, as it is across Canada,” says Matt Osborne, a Calgary fire fighter who serves as AFFA President. “Fire fighters are at an increased risk of cancer due to the toxic nature of our workplace, where burning plastics and other materials found in furniture and other household products combine to create a toxic soup that exposes fire fighters to millions of different and unknown and cancer-causing chemicals.”
Research shows, according to the AFFA, that fire fighters experience certain cancers at statistically higher rates than other workers, including brain, bladder, kidney and colorectal cancers, leukemia and non-Hodgkins lymphoma and reproductive cancers in both male and female fire fighters. Osborne says even though fire fighters wear breathing packs to prevent smoke inhalation, dangerous toxins can still be absorbed through the skin.


