Literature DB >> 961945

Applications of a job classification system in occupational epidemiology.

J F Gamble, R Spirtas, P Easter.   

Abstract

An occupational preventive medicine program attempts to control exposure so workers experience no detrimental effect on health. In a chemically complex industry, the definition of exposure is difficult because of the many different chemicals used and produced, the many different jobs and processes with qualitatively different exposures, and the movement of workers from job to job. Jobs have therefore been grouped on the basis of process or product into functionally homogeneous categories called occupational titles (OT's). Work experience can now be quantified independent of exposure (or by the dominant toxicants in each OT) and compared to health outcomes. Examples are discussed of the application of OT's to studies of the mortality and morbidity experience in the rubber industry, and the development of dose-response relations.

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Year:  1976        PMID: 961945      PMCID: PMC1653414          DOI: 10.2105/ajph.66.8.768

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  10 in total

1.  Periodic search for cancer in the carbon black industry.

Authors:  T H INGALLS; R RISQUEZ-IRIBARREN
Journal:  Arch Environ Health       Date:  1961-04

2.  Solvent exposure and leukemia among rubber workers: an epidemiologic study.

Authors:  A J McMichael; R Spirtas; L L Kupper; J F Gamble
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1975-04

3.  Mortality among rubber workers: Relationship to specific jobs.

Authors:  A J McMichael; R Spirtas; J F Gamble; P M Tousey
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1976-03

4.  The adsorption of 3,4-benzpyrene and pyrene by carbon blacks.

Authors:  H L FALK; P E STEINER
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1952-01       Impact factor: 12.701

5.  The identification of aromatic polycyclic hydrocarbons in carbon blacks.

Authors:  H L FALK; P E STEINER
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1952-01       Impact factor: 12.701

6.  Carcinogenic hydrocarbons and related compounds in processed rubber.

Authors:  H L FALK; P E STEINER; S GOLDFEIN; A BRESLOW; R HYKES
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  1951-05       Impact factor: 12.701

7.  A survey of occupational cancer in the rubber and cablemaking industries: results of five-year analysis, 1967-71.

Authors:  A J Fox; D C Lindars; R Owen
Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1974-04

8.  An epidemiologic study of mortality within a cohort of rubber workers, 1964-72.

Authors:  A J McMichael; R Spirtas; L L Kupper
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1974-07

9.  Talc: a possible occupational and environmental carcinogen.

Authors:  H P Blejer; R Arlon
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1973-02

10.  An epidemiological approach to the rubber industry. A study based on departmental experience.

Authors:  T F Mancuso; A Ciocco; A A el-Attar
Journal:  J Occup Med       Date:  1968-05
  10 in total
  1 in total

1.  Ventilatory function in rubber processing workers: acute changes over the workshift.

Authors:  M Governa; M Comai; M Valentino; L Antonicelli; F Rinaldi; E Pisani
Journal:  Br J Ind Med       Date:  1987-02
  1 in total

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