health
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UND Study: Bakken Oil Dust Fuels Asthma Surge in ND Workers
National Desk
May 2, 2026
A University of North Dakota health study, first reported by the Minot Daily News, reveals sharply elevated asthma rates among oil workers in the Bakken Formation, driven by chronic inhalation of respirable crystalline silica dust from hydraulic fracturing operations. Researchers documented personal breathing zone samples from wells across six regions exceeding OSHA full-shift limits and NIOSH recommendations, prompting a NIOSH Hazard Alert in 2016 that remains relevant today.[5] In western North Dakota counties like Mountrail and Williams, where fracking sandblasting has sparked epidemics akin to historical silicosis outbreaks, workers report persistent coughing, wheezing and chest tightness.[1][4]
The findings echo broader occupational perils in North Dakota's oil patch, where Bakken trucks disturb erionite—a carcinogenic fiber akin to asbestos—from local soils, heightening mesothelioma risks for rig hands and truckers along Highway 2.[6] UND experts note symptoms often emerge years later, complicating early intervention, while nearby residents downwind of active wells suffer wheeze, fatigue and reduced lung function, even among non-asthmatics.[2] Calls for stricter dust controls and ventilation gear intensify as North Dakota's oil production hit record highs in 2025, sustaining thousands of jobs but endangering lungs from Williston Basin pads.
Advocates, including UND's environmental health team, urge state regulators and operators to enforce silica exposure caps and monitor air quality more rigorously, citing underreported emissions that mirror national flaring health burdens.[3] Local unions in Minot and Dickinson report growing claims for chronic bronchitis tied to diesel fumes and chemical vapors, underscoring the human cost of the boom. Without action, researchers warn, North Dakota's oil workforce could mirror past silicosis epidemics among sandblasters.[4]
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