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Patty's Industrial Hygiene, Hazard Recognition
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Страница 1
Table of Contents
List of Tables
List of Illustrations
Guide
Pages
Patty's Industrial Hygiene
Страница 8
CONTRIBUTORS
PREFACE
USEFUL EQUIVALENTS AND CONVERSION FACTORS
Страница 12
OCCUPATIONAL AND INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE AS A PROFESSION: YESTERDAY, TODAY, AND TOMORROW
1 INTRODUCTION: THE RATIONALE FOR INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE PRACTICE
2 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE AND EVOLUTION OF THE RATIONALE OF INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE PRACTICE
2.1 The Early 1900s
2.2 1930s: The Emergence of Industrial Hygiene as a Profession
2.3 1940s: Publication of National Exposure Standards and Texts Buoyed the Profession
2.4 1950s: The Growth of Employment of Industrial Hygienists in General Industry
2.5 1960s: Certification of Industrial Hygienists Provides a Mark of Professional Recognition
2.6 1970s: OS&H Legislation and Its Impact on the Industrial Hygiene Profession in Several Countries
2.7 1980s: Growth and Major Changes in the Nature of Industrial Hygiene Profession
2.8 1990s: Growth of Industrial Hygiene Management
2.9 The Twenty‐First Century
2.9.1 Manufacturing
2.9.2 Service
2.9.3 Education and Training
2.10 Continuing Evolution of the Profession
3 CURRENT STATUS OF PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IN OCCUPATIONAL AND INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
3.1 Laboratory Accreditation Programs
4 IMPORTANT CURRENT AND EMERGING TOPICS IN THE PRACTICE OF INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
4.1 Product Stewardship
4.2 Advances in Exposure Assessment Methodologies and Technologies
4.3 Development of Industrial and Occupational Hygiene Training
4.4 Integration of Total Worker Exposure and Health Concepts into Industrial Hygiene Practice
4.5 The Growth in Management Systems for Occupational and Industrial Hygiene
4.6 Indoor Air Quality
4.7 Emergency Preparedness and Response
4.8 Evolution of Occupational and Industrial Hygiene Ethics
5 Industrial Hygiene Today: Currently Defining Occupational and Industrial Hygiene
6 CONCLUSIONS
Bibliography
Note
ETHICS IN INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE
1 DEFINING ETHICAL BEHAVIOR
2 BUSINESS ETHICS AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
2.1 Worker‐Driven Social Responsibility
3 FACTORS INFLUENCING ETHICAL MISCONDUCT
4 APPROACHES TO ETHICAL DECISION MAKING
4.1 Reason‐Based Approach
4.2 Intuitive Approach
5 BUSINESS CASE FOR EHS ETHICS
5.1 Making Your Case
6 ETHICAL GUIDANCE STATEMENTS OF THE INDIVIDUAL PROFESSIONS
6.1 ABIH Industrial Hygiene Code of Ethics
6.2 Joint Industrial Hygiene Associations Member Ethical Principles
6.3 AIHA Code of Conduct
6.4 Joint Industrial Hygiene Ethics Education Committee (JIHEEC)
6.5 Code of Ethics for Registered Occupational Hygienists and Occupational Hygiene Technologists (Canada)
6.6 International Code of Ethics for Occupational Health Professionals
7 CASE STUDIES: IH ETHICAL DILEMMAS
7.1 Case 1 – The Cannabis Conundrum
7.1.1 Background
7.1.2 Issue
7.1.3 Analysis
7.2 Case 2 – To Tell, or Not to Tell: Is There Even a Question?
7.2.1 Background
7.2.2 Issue
7.2.3 Analysis
7.3 Case 3 – The Global Garment Trade
7.3.1 Background
7.3.2 Issue
7.3.3 Analysis
ENDNOTES
Bibliography
PREVENTION THROUGH DESIGN
1 INTRODUCTION
2 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FATALITIES AND UNSAFE DESIGN
3 THE DEVELOPMENT OF PD
4 PD AND SYSTEM SAFETY
5 Z590.3 PREVENTION THROUGH DESIGN
5.1 Policy and Responsibilities
5.2 Suppliers and Third Parties
5.3 Design Safety Reviews
5.4 Hazard Analysis and Risk Assessment Process
6 PD IN CONSTRUCTION
6.1 Concept
6.1.1 30% Design
6.1.2 60% Design
6.1.3 90% Design
7 PD ANALYSIS AND ASSESSMENT METHODS
8 PERFORMING DESIGN SAFETY REVIEWS
9 PD CASE STUDY 9.1 Case Study: Large Winery Operation
9.1.1 Concern #1 – Sulfur Dioxide
9.1.2 Concern #2 – Dimethyl Dicarbonate
9.1.3 Risk Analysis
9.1.4 Risk Evaluation
9.1.5 Risk Treatment Options
9.1.6 Risk Treatment Selected
9.1.7 Monitoring, Review, and Benefits of Risk Treatments
10 THE BUSINESS CASE
11 CONCLUSION
Bibliography
RISK COMMUNICATION
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Defining Risk
1.2 Communicating Risk
1.3 Emergency Response
2 EHS ROLES IN RISK COMMUNICATION
2.1 Industrial Hygiene
2.2 Occupational Safety
2.3 Environmental Analyst
2.4 Occupational Physician
2.5 EHS Generalist
3 MODELS AS RISK COMMUNICATION
3.1 Bow‐Tie Model
3.2 Multidisciplinary Bow‐Tie Model
4 CONTROL BANDING AS RISK COMMUNICATION
4.1 Traffic Light Approach
4.2 Risk Matrix Communication
4.3 Global EHS Perspective
4.4 Multidisciplinary Control Banding
5 MULTIDISCIPLINARY RISK COMMUNICATION
5.1 Risk Level Based Management System
5.2 The Construction Example
6 RISK COMMUNICATION WITH WORKERS
6.1 Participatory EHS and Risk Communication
6.2 Turning Risk Knowledge into Action
6.3 Risk Communication for EHS Results
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ONLINE RESOURCES
Bibliography
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