![]() ![]() The epidemiology of tuberculosis in physicians. ![]() ![]() Banks DE, Morring KL, Boehlecke BA, Althouse RB, Merchant JA.Occupational lead poisoning in the United States: clinical and biochemical findings related to blood lead levels. Baker EL, Jr, Landrigan PJ, Barbour AG, Cox DH, Folland DS, Ligo RN, Throckmorton J.Centrilobular hepatic necrosis and acute renal failure in "solvent sniffers". Plague in the continental United States, 1900-76. Leukemia in shoe-workers exposed chronically to benzene. Pulmonary haemorrhage and haemolytic anaemia due to trimellitic anhydride. Ahmad D, Morgan WK, Patterson R, Williams T, Zeiss CR.Adenocarcinoma of the nasal cavity and sinuses in England and Wales. Nasal cancer in the Northamptonshire boot and shoe industry. Measuring the quality of medical care: second revision of tables of indexes. Rutstein DD, Berenberg W, Chalmers TC, Fishman AP, Perrin EB, Zuidema GD.Rutstein DD, Berenberg W, Chalmers TC, Child CG, 3rd, Fishman AP, Perrin EB.Occupational information on death certificates: a survey of state practices. Kaminski R, Brockert J, Sestito J, Frazier T.The teaching of occupational health in American medical schools. Occupational medicine: too long neglected. Links to PubMed are also available for Selected References. Get a printable copy (PDF file) of the complete article (1.7M), or click on a page image below to browse page by page. Full textįull text is available as a scanned copy of the original print version. We expect to update the list periodically to accommodate new occupational disease events which meet the criteria for inclusion. The list will serve as a framework for developing a national system for occupational health surveillance that may be applied at the state and local level, and as a guide for practicing physicians caring for patients with occupational illnesses. Only those conditions are included for which objective documentation of an associated agent, industry, and occupation exists in the scientific literature. The present SHE(O) list encompasses 50 disease conditions that are linked to the workplace. A SHE (Occupational) is a disease, disability, or untimely death which is occupationally related and whose occurrence may: 1) provide the impetus for epidemiologic or industrial hygiene studies or 2) serve as a warning signal that materials substitution, engineering control, personal protection, or medical care may be required. A Sentinel Health Event (SHE) is a preventable disease, disability, or untimely death whose occurrence serves as a warning signal that the quality of preventive and/or therapeutic medical care may need to be improved. ![]()
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