Health and Safety Beyond the Workplace
Description
The carcinogenic potential of building materials, red meat, high-fat foods—even fruits and vegetables—is often perceived as a part of the widening array of acknowledged health risks. The sphere of health hazard concern has moved well beyond the plant and the factory. Recognition of the potential health risks in the home and places of rest and recreation has become a priority item. Health and Safety Beyond the Workplace, thirteen studies assembled by leading environmental and occupational health specialists, outlines the nature and level of exposures to harmful substances we face daily. Chronicled within a 24-hour exposure profile, here is a practical guide to the specifics of chemical and physical risks present in:
- home gardening
- home improvements and repairs
- household chemicals
- arts and crafts
- outdoor recreation
- food, alcohol, and tobacco
- potable water
- ionizing and nonionizing radiation
- indoor and outdoor air pollution
Ranging systematically from personal and community to personal practice exposures, the book assesses and identifies the risks inherent in each exposure mode and supplies preventive risk techniques. Quality of life has never depended more on the quality of safety in our air, food, and at-home and recreational environments. With Health and Safety Beyond the Workplace, you'll have an invaluable handbook to minimizing the chemical and physical hazards you may unknowingly encounter every day—right under the sink and in your backyard.
PERSONAL EXPOSURE.Arts and Crafts (F. Thompson & P. Thompson).
Home Gardening (S. Yamaguchi & L. Cralley).
Home Improvements and Repair (R. Garrison & P. Brady).
Household Chemicals (L. Cralley & L. Cralley).
Indoor Air Pollution (P. Scheff, et al.).
Ionizing Radiation (R. Beethe & M. Miller).
Nonionizing Radiation and Fields (R. Patterson & R.Hitchcock).
Outdoor Recreation (M. Raymond).
COMMUNITY EXPOSURE.
Air Pollution (L. Gephart & J. Hicks).
Food (J. Holtshouser, et al.).
Potable Water (R. Rubino).
PERSONAL PRACTICES EXPOSURE.
Alcohol (B. Dinman).
Tobacco Use (A. Kondo & M. Eriksen).
Summary and Commentary (W. Cooper).
Glossary of Terms.
Index.
Lester V. Cralley was formerly manager of Environmental Health Services for Aluminum Company of America. He has served as president of the American Industrial Hygiene Association and vice chairman of the American Board of Industrial Hygiene. He is a Diplomate of the American Academy of Industrial Hygiene, an honorary member of the American Industrial Hygiene Association, and a recipient of the Cummings Memorial Award. He received his PhD in industrial hygiene from the University of Iowa.
Lewis J. Cralley was formerly associated with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Public Health Service. He has served as president of the American Industrial Hygiene Association, chairman of the American Conference of Industrial Hygienists, and chairman of the Occupational Health Section of the American Public Health Association. He was a recipient of the Meritorious Service Award for Public Health Service, Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Henry F. Smyth Award, and the Cummings Memorial Award. He received his PhD in industrial hygiene from the University of Iowa.
W. Clark Cooper has served as a consultant in occupational health from 1972 to the present. He has been on the faculty of the Dept. of Occupational Health, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley. He was Director of Occupational Health Field Headquarters in Cincinnati, eventually becoming Chief of Division Headquarters in Washington, D.C. He was also Deputy Chief of Medicine, U.S. Public Health Service Hospital in San Francisco. He also worked at the National Institutes of Health, testing new antimalarial drugs. He has also been a research fellow in nutrition at the University of Cincinnati, conducting studies on nicotinic acid and pellagra. Dr. Cooper received his MD from the University of Virginia and MPH from Harvard University.
In-Plant Practices for Job Related Health Hazards Control
Volume 1: Production Processes
Volume 2: Engineering Aspects
Edited by Lester V. Cralley and Lewis J. Cralley
Vol. 1: 1989 (0-471-61975-2) 938 pp.
Vol. 2: 1989 (0-471-50121-2) 578 pp.
2-Vol. Set: 1989 (0-471-51097-1)
Patty's Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology
Volume 1: General Principles
Volumes 2A, 2B & 2C: Toxicology
Edited by George D. Clayton and Florence E. Clayton
Volume 3A: Theory and Rationale of Industrial Hygiene Practice: The Work Environment
Volume 3B: Theory and Rationale of Industrial Hygiene Practice: Biological Responses
Edited by Lewis J. Cralley and Lester V. Cralley
Vol. 1: 1978 (0-471-16046-6) 1,466pp.
Vol. 2A: 1981 (0-471-16042-3) 1,420 pp.
Vol. 2B: 1981 (0-471-07943-X) 937 pp.
Vol. 2C: 1982 (0-471-09258-4) 1,296 pp.
Vol. 3A: 1985 (0-471-86137-5) 822 pp.
Vol. 3B: 1985 (0-471-82333-3) 753 pp.
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780471504528
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
Sports & Recreation
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 162.00(W) x Dimensions: 242.00(H) x Dimensions: 22.00(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English