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Cover image for Physical and biological hazards of the workplace
Title:
Physical and biological hazards of the workplace
Edition:
2nd ed.
Publication Information:
New York, N.Y. : Wiley-Interscience, 2002
ISBN:
9780471386476

Available:*

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30000010045601 RC963 P48 2002 Open Access Book Book
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30000010205091 RC963 P48 2002 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

The first award-winning edition of Peter Wald and Gregg Stave s Physical and Biological Hazards of the Workplace has become one of the leading references for the practice of occupational and environmental health. During the seven years since the landmark first edition appeared, there have been major revisions of government standards and guidelines for physical agents such as ergonomics, shift work, and electric power, and for biological agents such as tuberculosis and blood-borne pathogens.

Now extensively updated and expanded, this book continues to be a practical "how to" reference for health and safety professionals. The text is logically organized for quick reference, with separate sections devoted to physical and biological hazards. Introductory chapters furnish an overview of each broad class of workplace hazard, followed by detailed entries describing specific causes, agents, and organisms.
All recognized sources of physical hazards are discussed, including ergonomic hazards; dangers associated with shift work; extremes of temperature and atmospheric pressure; energy hazards including noise, electricity, infrared and ultraviolet light, lasers, magnetic fields, and microwave and RF exposure; and ionizing radiation. Biological agents are covered in equal depth, from the fundamentals of microbiology and infectious disease to the specific details of organic hazards like wood dust and endotoxins plus viruses, bacteria, fungi, parasites, envenomations, and more. The latest research and pharmaceutical technologies and their attendant risks are considered, including recombinant organisms, prions, and malignant cells. This book is organized according to a common format that encompasses all the information health professionals require:

-Occupational setting
-Exposure route and measurement guidelines
-Normal physiology and pathophysiology or pathobiology
-Diagnosis and treatment
-Medical surveillance
-Control and prevention
-OSHA and NIOSH standards and guidelines

The contributors include many of the nation s leading authorities in occupational and environmental medicine. Drs. Wald and Stave won the Jean Spencer Felton Award for scientific writing in 1995 from the Western Occupational and Environmental Medicine Association for the first edition of Physical and Biological Hazards of the Workplace. The first edition is also on the Core Recommended Reading List from the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

With a foreword by Dr. James P. Hughes and extensive references to the broader body of professional literature, this is an indispensable first source of information and guidance for both primary care professionals and occupational health and industrial hygiene specialists. No other single reference addresses the full spectrum of physical and biological workplace hazards. Physical and Biological Hazards of the Workplace covers the subject with unparalleled clarity, precision, and authority.


Author Notes

PETER H. WALD, MD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM, is Principal and Medical Director of WorkCare, Inc., Associate Clinical Professor-Occupational Medicine at the University of Southern California and Assistant Clinical Professor-Occupational Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, and at the University of California, Irvine.
GREGG M. STAVE, MD, JD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM, is Director, Strategic Health Planning, for GlaxoSmithKline and Consulting Assistant Professor-Occupational and Environmental Medicine at Duke University Medical Center.


Table of Contents

Foreword
Preface
Contributors
Part I
Introduction to Physical HazardsP. Wald
Section I Worker-Material Interfaces
Ergonomics and Upper Extremity Musculoskeletal DisordersT. Hales
Manual Materials HandlingT. Waters
Occupational Vibration ExposureD. Wilder, et al.
Mechanical EnergyJ. Kubalik
Section II The Physical Work Environment
Hot EnvironmentsG. Gullickson
Cold EnvironmentsE. Evenson
High-Pressure EnvironmentsD. Smith
Low-Pressure and High-altitude EnvironmentsP. Merchant
Shift WorkA. Scott
Section III Energy and Electromagnetic Radiation
Ionizing RadiationB. Breitenstein and J. Seward
Ultraviolet RadiationJ. Hathaway and D. Sliney
Visible Light and Infrared RadiationJ. Hathaway and D. Sliney
Laser RadiationJ. Hathaway and D. Sliney
Microwave, Radiofrequency and Extremely Low-Frequency EnergyR. Cohen
NoiseR. Dobie
Electric Power and Electrical InjuriesJ. Jones
Part II Biological Hazards
General Principles of Microbiology and Infectious DiseaseJ. Tulis and W. Stopford
Clinical Recognition of Occupational Exposure and Health ConsequencesG. Greenberg and G. Stave
Prevention of Illness from Biological HazardsL. Frazier, et al.
VirusesG. Jackson
BacteriaC. Marti and J. Meyer
MycobacteriaL. Frazier
FungiC. Glazer and C. Rose
Rickettsia and ChlamydiaD. Darcey and R. Langley
ParasitesW. Yang
EnvenomationsJ. Palmier and C. Palmier
AllergensG. Powell
LatexC. Goodno and C. Epling
Malignant CellsA. Miller
Recombinant OrganismsJ. Herstein, et al.
Prions: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD) and Related Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSE)D. Darcey
EndotoxinsB. Boehlich and R. Jacobs
Wood DustH. Imbus
Index
About the Authors
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