Your Printer May Be Hazardous To Your Health

Tue Jul 31, 2007 11:35PM EDT

See Comments (722)

I've long heard rumors that the fine particulate dust used in laser printer toner cartridges may be a health risk. It certainly makes sense: Not all of that stuff can stick to the paper, and if you've ever spilled toner you know there's no way it can be good for your lungs. Now a controlled study is confirming the information, saying that 30 percent of all laser printers tested emit dangerous particles described as "causing lasting damage on the scale of inhaled cigarette smoke." These tiny particles lodge deep in the lungs and can lead to anything from lung irritation to full-on cancer.

The tests come from an Australian technology university and were conducted in a "large open-plan space," and found that printers could increase particulate matter in the air by up to 400 percent.

While I'm still trying to obtain the list of high vs. low particle emitters from the university, there appears to be a lot of variability among machines and even among different toner cartridges. New cartridges, for example, produce more particle matter than old ones. Printing graphics pages also produces more particle matter than text, since more toner is used, and obviously, air quality gets worse the more pages you spit out. I'll post the full list of printers tested here (or a link to it) as soon as I can obtain one.

The upshot is that printer emissions should potentially be regulated much the way that auto emissions are, but even in the absence of government intervention, use common sense around your printer: Limit use when possible (tell the guy that prints out every single email to cut it out), sequester printers in their own rooms and away from workers, ventilate offices appropriately, and have your own air and printer tested before it becomes a serious health problem.

UPDATE: The full study is available online now (scroll down to Table 1, at the bottom, for the list of printers tested). HP LaserJets (the vast majority of the models tested were HPs) appear among both the best and worst on the list. Check it out!

LINK: Printers pose health risks: study 

UPDATE: HP responds here 

Comments on Your Printer May Be Hazardous To Your Health

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  • 27 Posted by ekranick on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    What is next, they have already passed workplace smoking bans, now they will pass a workplace printing ban? We need to draw the line some where. Moderation people

  • 29 Posted by realistindenial on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:33PM EDT Report Abuse

    More proof that work is bad for your health. Avoid it at all cost. :-)

  • 30 Posted by thatsdope16 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:02PM EDT Report Abuse

    Great i play with the replacement toners at work AND i sit on the printer at work. MAN!

  • 31 Posted by vragis357 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:38PM EDT Report Abuse

    we're all gonna die of something. Either it'll be your polluted groundwater, industrial waste, your printer toner, or a gunshot wound to the head. Either stop worrying about everything that's going to kill you or go live in a hermetically sealed bubble. I fix laser printers and replace toner all day. My black mucus and I are perfectly happy.

  • 32 Posted by osu_cowboy_85 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    I need to find a hypochondriac working at the same place of business that I do, so I let him read this study. Heck! he'll be holding his breath every time he prints something off at work. Ha,ha,ha...

  • 33 Posted by kingdavelopo on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    The printer at my desk is three feet from my face. That's just dandy. How do we protect ourselves from the toner?

  • 34 Posted by tattoomonkey235 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    Great I also sit by a printer and use it probably about 100 times throughout the day!! Well, I guess quitting smoking wasnt much of a help now was it!!

  • 35 Posted by angel.face06 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Great so now I can...what? Wear a mask to work? This is stupid...I could've done without knowing I'm going to die from sitting 10 ft away from a printer.

  • 36 Posted by coribrownis on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:29PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have two HP Laserjet printers in my office and both are within arms reach at each computer station. I print 400-1000 pages a day.

  • 37 Posted by mizzmariss on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:22PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ohh thank god! Finaly an excuse not to have to use the copier at work!!

  • 38 Posted by joshua_orpin on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    I might as well start smoking, eating nothing but red meat, overindulge in booze, and quit going to the gym.

  • 40 Posted by becca20c on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:04PM EDT Report Abuse

    Geez..we can't do anything nowadays without having to worry about health risks..using office machines can even harm us now? America is waaaay to spoiled. For some reason, I think this article is exaggerated.

  • 41 Posted by enchantedponyisland on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:54PM EDT Report Abuse

    Doesn't suprise me... it seems like everything is hazardous to your health now.

  • 42 Posted by deniseorsick on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    My HP printer sits right behind me. I work for a Relocation Service, for a big company and we print Labels and signs all day long. Wow....this is not good. How can we protect ourselves.

  • 43 Posted by aniteh2007 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    does it apply to laser printers only? I have a desk jet ink printer.

  • 45 Posted by zbbeck on Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    I work in a room full of printers -- now I'm terrified. thanks Yahoo, great article, how about publishing a study that says the sun will explode within the next 20 years? I'm sure that will make everyone feel great.

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