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NewsAugust 4, 2007

MILWAUKEE -- Should laser printers come with a surgeon general's warning? An Australian research team has found that some printers give off invisible particles as they operate, with the worst culprit emitting concentrations similar to those of secondhand tobacco smoke...

The Associated Press

MILWAUKEE -- Should laser printers come with a surgeon general's warning?

An Australian research team has found that some printers give off invisible particles as they operate, with the worst culprit emitting concentrations similar to those of secondhand tobacco smoke.

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But that doesn't mean you need a mask every time you pass your printer.

The conclusions are based on a small subset of data, the researchers acknowledge, and raise many more questions than answers. Independent experts and a printer manufacturer say it would be premature to issue any warnings until researchers know exactly what chemicals make up the ultrafine particles. Some of the types of particles identified by the researchers can also be generated from simple activities such as burning a candle or making toast.

Even so, one of the researchers behind the study, physicist Lidia Morawska of Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia, said it wouldn't hurt to make sure printers are kept in open areas at a distance from users.

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