Completely updated version this classic reference covers both physical hazards and biological agents
Provides updated information on protecting workers from proven and possible health risks from manual material handling, extremes of temperature and pressure, ionizing and non-ionizing (magnetic fields) radiation, shiftwork, and more
Details major changes in our understanding of biological hazards including Ebola, Chikungunya, Zika, HIV, Hepatitis C, Lyme disease, MERS-CoV, TB, and much more
All infectious diseases have been updated from an occupational health perspective
Includes practical guidance on to how to set up medical surveillance for hazards and suggests preventive measures that can be used to reduce occupational diseases
1 Introduction to Physical Hazards 3 Peter H. Wald
I Worker Material Interfaces 13
2 Ergonomics and Upper Extremity Musculoskeletal Disorders 13 Thomas R. Hales
3 Manual Materials Handling 33 Robert B. Dick, Stephen D. Hudock, Ming ]Lun Lu, Thomas R. Waters, and Vern Putz–Anderson
4 Occupational Vibration Exposure 53 David G. Wilder and Donald E. Wasserman
5 Mechanical Energy 73 James Kubalik
II The Physical Work Environment 87
6 Hot Environments 87 David W. DeGroot and Laura A. Pacha
7 Cold Environments 101 David W. DeGroot and Laura A. Pacha
8 High ]pressure Environments 111 Tony L. Alleman and Joseph R. Serio
9 Low ]pressure and High ]Altitude Environments 131 Worthe S. Holt
10 Shift Work 139 Allene J. Scott
III Energy and Electromagnetic Radiation 177
11 Ionizing Radiation 177 James P. Seward
12 Ultraviolet Radiation 197 James A. Hathaway and David H. Sliney
13 Visible Light and Infrared Radiation 203 James A. Hathaway and David H. Sliney
14 Laser Radiation 209 David H. Sliney and James A. Hathaway
15 Microwave, Radiofrequency, and Extremely Low ]frequency Energy 215 Richard Cohen and Peter H. Wald
16 Noise 223 Robert A. Dobie
17 Electrical Power and Electrical Injuries 231 Jeffrey R. Jones
PART II BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS 241
18 General Principles of Microbiology and Infectious Disease 243 Woodhall Stopford
19 Clinical Recognition of Occupational Exposure and Health Consequences 249 Gary N. Greenberg and Gregg M. Stave
20 Prevention of Illness from Biological Hazards 261 Gregg M. Stave
21 Viruses 275 Manijeh Berenji
22 Bacteria 347 Christopher J. Martin, Aletheia S. Donahue, and John D. Meyer
23 Mycobacteria 411 Gregg M. Stave
24 Fungi 425 Craig S. Glazer and Cecile S. Rose
25 Anaplasma, Chlamydophila, Coxiella, Ehrlichia, and Rickettsia 457 Dennis J. Darcey
26 Parasites 471 William N. Yang
27 Envenomations 501 James A. Palmier
28 Allergens 519 David C. Caretto
29 Latex 537 Carol A. Epling
30 Malignant Cells 543 Aubrey K. Miller
31 Recombinant Organisms 547 Jessica Herzstein and Gregg M. Stave
32 Prions: Creutzfeldt jakob Disease (CJD) and Related Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSEs) 553 Dennis J. Darcey
33 Endotoxins 557 Robert Jacobs
34 Wood Dust 563 Harold R. Imbus and Gregg M. Stave
INDEX 569
Gregg Stave and Peter Wald s Physical and Biological Hazards of the Workplace is one of the leading references for the practice of occupational and environmental health. During the fourteen years since the previous edition there have been major revisions of government standards and guidelines for physical agents such as manual materials handling, shift work and high–pressure environments, and biological agents including tuberculosis and tick–borne diseases as well as the emergence or spread of biological hazards, including Ebola Virus.
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.
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. Acting as a first reference this book provides a practical overview for the primary health practitioner. It is also intended to be useful for health professionals who have no formal occupational medicine training. The third edition continues to assist all health professionals who are responsible for protecting the health and safety of workers.
Gregg M. Stave, MD, JD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM, FACPM is a consultant in occupational medicine and corporate health and Assistant Consulting Professor in the Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine at Duke University Medical Center. He previously worked as a corporate medical director for Glaxo.
Peter H. Wald, MD, MPH, FACP, FACOEM, FACMT, is the Enterprise Medical Director at USAA in San Antonio, Texas, and Adjunct Professor of Public Health, San Antonio Regional Campus, University of Texas School of Public Health, Houston, TX.