Cancer Prevention for Firefighters: The Decon Habits That Save Lives
First Due Co.
Fire Service Training
Firefighters face elevated cancer risks from occupational exposures, but proven decontamination practices can significantly reduce those risks. Learn the essential decon habits backed by NFPA standards that protect your health and your career.
The Reality of Occupational Cancer Risk
Firefighting is one of the few professions where cancer is listed as an occupational hazard. Studies have shown that firefighters have higher incidence rates of certain cancers compared to the general population, including bladder, colon, lung, and skin cancers.
The culprit? Carcinogenic exposure during firefighting operations. Smoke, soot, and flame retardants contain hazardous substances like polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). While we can't eliminate the hazard entirely, that's the nature of the job, we can dramatically reduce our risk through intentional decontamination practices.
The good news: decon habits work. And they're simpler than you might think.
Understanding the Exposure Window
One critical insight from occupational health research is that decon effectiveness depends on timing. The longer carcinogenic particles remain on your skin and clothing, the greater the opportunity for absorption. This means that decontamination immediately after fireground operations is your first line of defense.
NFPA 1851: Standard on Selection, Care, and Maintenance of Protective Ensembles for Structural Fire Fighting and Proximity Fire Fighting emphasizes that contaminated gear must be handled carefully to prevent secondary exposure, both during decon and throughout the cleaning process.
Essential Decon Habits: The Foundation
Gross Decon at the Fireground
Before leaving the scene, begin removing visible contaminants:
Remove your SCBA and outer protective equipment in the designated decon area
Use a dry brush or tool to remove soot and debris from gear before it dries
If water is available, rinse exposed skin and equipment
Never drive home in contaminated gear, this extends exposure and contaminates your personal vehicle
The Station Shower Protocol
This is non-negotiable. Shower within one hour of exposure whenever possible:
Use warm water and wash your entire body thoroughly, paying special attention to your face, neck, hands, and forearms
Wash your hair if you weren't wearing a hood or if you suspect scalp exposure
Don't skip any area, carcinogens can settle in unexpected places
Change into clean clothes before eating, drinking, or handling food
Gear Decontamination and Maintenance
Your protective ensemble requires proper care:
Separate contaminated gear immediately after use
Follow NFPA 1851 guidelines for gear cleaning, most departments use certified cleaning services for structural gear
Never take gear home to wash in residential washers (cross-contamination risk)
Inspect gear regularly for damage that could allow contaminant penetration
Replace gear according to manufacturer specifications and departmental policy
Vehicle and Equipment Decon
Cross-contamination doesn't stop at your body:
Wipe down equipment that contacted the fireground
Clean your apparatus compartments regularly, especially high-touch surfaces
Consider washout facilities at your station as part of routine operations
Don't allow contaminated gear to sit in vehicles overnight
Building a Decon Culture
Individual habits matter, but departmental culture is equally important. Stations with strong decon protocols see better compliance and better health outcomes.
Leadership's Role
Make decon a non-negotiable standard, not a suggestion
Invest in proper facilities: hot water, soap, shower facilities, gear cleaning services
Model the behavior, officers should decon alongside their crews
Track decon compliance as a safety metric, just like SCBA checks
Peer Accountability
Normalize asking teammates, "Did you shower yet?"
Create a positive culture where decon is seen as the smart move, not an inconvenience
Share information about cancer prevention, knowledge drives behavior change
Celebrate departments that excel in occupational health practices
The Practical Reality: Making Decon Stick
We understand that perfect decon isn't always possible. Not every call allows for immediate gross decon. Some stations lack ideal facilities. But good is better than nothing:
If you can't shower at the station, bring a change of clothes and shower at home immediately
Even a quick rinse is better than driving around contaminated
Wet wipes for hands and face before eating can reduce ingestion of contaminants
Keeping extra station shirts means you can change out of contaminated clothing quickly
NFPA Standards: Your Safety Blueprint
NFPA 1851 and NFPA 1581 (Standard on Fire Department Infection Control Program) provide the framework for occupational health. These aren't bureaucratic hurdles, they're based on evidence about what actually prevents harm.
Key takeaways from these standards:
Decon areas should be designated and properly equipped
Gear must be cleaned appropriately based on exposure level
Records should document both decon procedures and gear maintenance
Medical surveillance programs should track occupational exposures
Your Action Plan
Start with these concrete steps this week:
Audit your station's decon capabilities, Do you have adequate shower facilities? Hot water? Proper soap? Work with leadership to address gaps.
Commit to the 1-hour rule, Shower within one hour of any significant exposure. Track this for 30 days to establish the habit.
Check your gear care process, Are contaminated bunkers being cleaned properly? Are you following manufacturer guidelines?
Start a conversation, Talk to your crew about cancer risk and decon. Shared commitment is powerful.
Document what works, Notice which decon practices feel sustainable at your station and build from there.
The Bottom Line
Cancer prevention doesn't require perfection, it requires consistency. Every shower, every gear cleaning, every contaminated shirt removed immediately adds up over a career. These habits compound.
You chose a profession that requires courage and sacrifice. But protecting yourself from occupational cancer isn't about sacrifice, it's about being smart. It's about showing up for the next shift, the next season, the next decade of service.
Decon habits aren't an afterthought to the job. They're part of the job.
Ready to Build a Stronger Decon Culture?
At First Due Co., we've developed comprehensive training modules on occupational health and decontamination procedures. Our platform makes it easy to train your entire department on NFPA standards, best practices, and the specific protocols that work for your station.
Explore our safety training courses today and invest in the health of your firefighters. Because the best way to fight cancer is to prevent it from getting a foothold in the first place.
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