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Journal Article

Citation

Wheat JR, McKnight JT, Weems WH. Arch. Family Med. 1994; 3(4): 372-376.

Affiliation

Department of Behavioral and Community Medicine, University of Alabama School of Medicine, Tuscaloosa.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, American Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8012627

Abstract

Family physicians are increasingly being called on to become involved in the health care of workers in local industries. Many family physicians are the sole providers of occupational health care in their communities, yet their formal training is usually deficient in some of the more specialized aspects of occupational medicine. Treating work-related injuries and exposures to hazardous substances may require analyses of work sites that many family physicians have neither the time nor the expertise to perform adequately. Industrial hygienists are the consultants who are qualified to assess potential occupational hazards and are trained to perform a comprehensive analysis of the work environment as it relates to worker health. This analysis may include the measurement of potentially hazardous substances, such as ambient air concentrations of particulate matter and toxic gases, and recommendations for prevention of exposures. Two cases are presented to illustrate how valuable a consultation with an industrial hygienist can be to the family physician.


Language: en

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