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Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology. Volumes I and II

JAMA. 1949;141(17):1269-1270. doi:10.1001/jama.1949.02910170071029.
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ABSTRACT

Volume I of this work deals with the broad aspects of industrial hygiene which the editor defines as "the science and art of preserving health through the recognition, evaluation and control of environmental causes and sources of illness in industry." While it is primarily concerned with industrial hygiene, a considerable part of the subject matter relates to industrial medicine. The fifteen chapter titles of the first volume are as follows: Industrial Hygiene—Retrospect and Prospect; Industrial Hygiene Records and Reports; the Industrial Hygiene Survey and Personnel; Personal Factors in Competence and Fatigue; Environmental Factors in Fatigue and Competence; Physiological Effects of Abnormal Atmospheric Pressure; The Mode of Entry and Action of Toxic Materials; Sampling and Analysis of Atmospheric Contaminants; Radiant Energy and Radium; Ventilation; Occupational Dermatoses; The Visible Marks of Occupation and Occupational Diseases; Fire and Explosion Hazards of Combustible Gases and Vapors; Explosion and Fire Hazards of Combustible Dusts

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