What Is Baker's Asthma and Why Does It Matter
Baker's asthma is an occupational lung disease caused by immunological sensitisation to proteins in wheat flour, rye flour, and enzyme additives used in bread improvers. It is one of the most common occupational diseases in Australia and affects approximately 10 per cent of workers with sustained flour dust exposure. The condition develops when repeated inhalation of flour dust proteins triggers an immune response in the worker's airways. Once sensitisation occurs, subsequent exposure — even at very low concentrations — causes airway inflammation, bronchospasm, and asthma symptoms including wheeze, cough, chest tightness, and breathlessness. Baker's asthma is usually irreversible once established. While symptoms can be managed with medication, the worker will remain sensitised for life and must avoid further flour dust exposure to prevent severe asthma attacks. This makes prevention the only effective strategy. The incoming WEL of 0.5 mg/m³ for flour dust is specifically designed to reduce the incidence of baker's asthma by limiting exposure to levels below which sensitisation is unlikely to develop.
Who Is at Risk and When Symptoms Develop
Any worker with regular exposure to flour dust is at risk of developing baker's asthma. The highest-risk roles include manual dough mixers who tip flour bags into open mixers, bakers who work with flour throughout the shift in poorly ventilated areas, flour mill operatives who handle flour during milling, packaging, and transfer, and confectionery workers who use flour as an ingredient or dusting agent. Symptoms typically develop after a latency period of months to years of regular exposure, although some workers develop sensitisation within the first year of employment. The characteristic pattern is symptoms that worsen during work periods and improve during weekends and holidays. Workers may initially notice nasal symptoms such as sneezing and rhinitis before chest symptoms develop. By the time a worker presents with frank asthma symptoms, significant airway sensitisation has usually occurred. This is why health surveillance with spirometry and symptom questionnaires is essential for early detection — it identifies workers in the early stages of sensitisation before irreversible asthma develops.
Dust Control: The Primary Prevention Strategy
Preventing baker's asthma requires reducing flour dust exposure below the level at which sensitisation occurs. The incoming WEL of 0.5 mg/m³ represents the regulatory target, but best practice aims to achieve exposure as low as reasonably practicable. The most effective controls are engineering measures that prevent flour dust from becoming airborne. Enclosed flour transfer systems using pneumatic conveying or enclosed screw conveyors eliminate dust release during flour movement. Local exhaust ventilation at bag tipping stations captures dust at the point of generation. Enclosed weighing systems prevent dust escape during scaling. Low-dust flour types with larger particle sizes and surface treatment to reduce dustiness can reduce airborne concentrations by 30 to 50 per cent compared to standard flour, although they are more expensive. Automatic ingredient dosing eliminates manual flour handling for high-volume operations. General ventilation with filtered fresh air supply maintains overall air quality but is insufficient as a standalone control for bag tipping and mixing areas. A combination of these controls, implemented in priority order based on exposure monitoring data, provides the most cost-effective path to compliance.