Showing posts with label Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Safety. Show all posts

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Home Inspection - Safety Issues - Part 1 of 3

www.homeownerseries.com This is video #1 of a 3-part series. The videos are Part 1 = youtu.be Part 2 = youtu.be Part 3 = youtu.be To watch the Safety Issues Playlist = www.youtube.com SAFETY CONCERNS Intro to Hazardous Materials There are certain materials in home construction in which after their widespread utilization, were found to be hazardous to people. Such materials may still be present in your home so it is a good idea to know what they are. Asbestos Asbestos is a naturally occurring, fibrous mineral. Asbestos that is dry and capable of crumbling is considered dangerous, only when it releases its tiny fibers into the air. Asbestos, if inhaled, is associated with the disease asbestosis, and certain types of cancer. Asbestos has been used widely in the past because it has properties that make it commercially valuable. Asbestos does not burn or easily conduct heat and electricity. Manufacturers continue to use it as roof shingles, roof cements, asbestos cement sheets, house siding, and as asbestos cement water pipes. Such products have virtually no exposure risk. Asbestos has been banned since 1973 for use in areas where fibers could be inhaled, such as popcorn ceilings. Asbestos may be found in some old attic insulation, flu pipes used to vent water heaters and furnaces, as a spray on insulation coating for water pipes, and in old style floor tiles. A licensed contractor must remove asbestos. Laws, nationwide, require the proper handling of asbestos materials before ...

Lung Cancer Quiz

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Response to Occupational Health Hazards: A Historical Perspective (Industrial Health & Safety)

!1: Now is the time Response to Occupational Health Hazards: A Historical Perspective (Industrial Health & Safety) Order Today!


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What are the effects of industry upon the health of employees? This enormously complex question involves historical, social, political, and scientific issues—and has a major impact on national policy decisions and regulatory activities. This unique book explores the history of occupational disease in the American workplace. Beginning with the centuries-old belief of disease as an acceptable and unavoidable by-product of industrial expansion, it moves to current methods of diagnosis, control and prevention. You will find in-depth coverage of:
  • the growth of federal responsibility for occupational risks
  • the evolution of mandatory health standards
  • risk assessment and federal policy 1970–1990
  • case studies of lead, asbestos, vinyl chloride, silicosis and byssinosis and steps taken to control or eliminate these conditions
Although the exact numbers are disputed, the Office of Technology Assessment today estimates about 6,000 deaths annually due to workplace injuries and about 100,000 deaths due to occupational illness. This book is vital for all physicians, industrial hygienists, safety professionals, nurses, lawyers, government policy makers, and others who are continually working to reduce these figures. It points the way to better methods of detection and control…innovative diagnostic techniques…improved epidemiological methodology…and a full understanding of government, labor and management’s responsibilities to the health of their workers.



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