Article Title,Year,Volume,Issue,Page Range,Author Personal protective equipment. better safety helmets,1989,41,10,294-296,Mills Safety: accident prevention and safety--whose responsibility?,1979,31,1,31-36,Glendon Safety economics,1975,27,11,488-490,Glendon The development of the internal combustion engine. One view of the motor industry,1969,21,4,200-220,Holgate For and against (seamen and safety),1969,21,4,227-233,Trelawney Drugs in common use and their side effects,1971,23,9,300-304,Duckworth Prevention of suicide,1976,28,7,354-358,Spry The trouble with trucks,1976,28,6,285-289,Morris Case history: cold + worn gears = VWF,1979,31,12,581,Edmonds Safety: keeping eyes protected,1979,31,10,463-465,Mitchell The stress of driving,1986,38,10,320-322,Hines Compatibility in PPE (personal protective equipment),1986,38,5,158-161,Hickling Reducing the incidence of eye injuries,1986,38,4,112-114,Denyer Just spare a thought for the driver,1987,39,5,154-156, Too tired to drive?,1987,39,5,152-153, The rescuers' safety,1988,40,2,461-463,Ritson Personal protective equipment. A practical guide to eye protection,1989,41,10,280-1 288,Yelland Personal protective equipment. Protection of the eyes during welding,1989,41,10,279,Proctor Violence at work--some of the legal issues,1989,41,8,217 221,Howard Violence at work. Physical attack and threatening behaviour--new survey findings,1989,41,8,212-216,Stockdale Working against violence,1989,41,8,209-211,Poyner Working alone on dark evenings--a hazard for researchers,1990,42,2,44-47,Rivett Eye hazards for outside workers,1992,44,7,198-201,Montague Debriefing victims of violence,1992,44,4,115-117,Bamber The human cost of accidents,1970,22,5,141-144,Owens Comments after student experience in a department store,1966,18,3,134-136,Finlayson Accidents within the building industry,1965,17,4,211-212,Hall Safety. Construction management,1975,27,12,529-532,Abeytunga Assessment of damages,1975,27,11,491-493,Poole Safety. Splendid isolation,1975,27,10,451-452,Sinnott The rationale of safety assessment,1975,27,7,293-295,Hewitt The safety policy,1975,27,5,212-216,Hale Employees' involvement in health and safety at work,1975,27,5,181-187,Booth Accident investigation systems,1975,27,3,110-113,Hale Injury compensation,1975,27,3,115-116,Poole Hazards of welding,1975,27,2,60-65, Cost of accidents,1975,27,2,49-56,Ross Design for machinery safety,1975,27,1,24-26,Booth Safety audits,1974,26,12,494 497,Baughan Effect of tax saving on damages,1974,26,12,499-500,Poole Miners health--2,1974,26,11,438-441,Richards Labour protection in USSR,1974,26,10,401-403,Kelly Safe scaffolding,1974,26,9,366-367,Poole Accident compensation in NZ,1974,26,8,311-316,Whincup Protective clothing,1974,26,7,268-270,McKenna Duty to trespassers,1974,26,6,229-231,Poole Safety: limitations defined,1974,26,4,136-137,Kelly Weather watch,1974,26,4,133-135,Turner Assessing damages,1974,26,4,138-139,Poole Safety: motivation and propaganda,1974,26,3,92-95,Hale Industrial injuries benefit,1974,26,3,80-81,Blyghton Responsibility for safety,1974,26,1,19-22,Whincup Under-reporting of accidents,1974,26,1,16-17,Baughan Employers' liability,1973,25,12,463-468,Whincup Who is accident prone?,1972,24,12,444-446,Hale Loss control cuts accidents and costs,1972,24,10,357-361,Shakespeare No room for emotion in tackling hazards,1972,24,10,354-355,King The right to work in safety,1972,24,10,350-351,Harvey Costing industrial accidents,1972,24,9,321-323,Bamber Sweeping changes to involve workers in safety,1972,24,8,269-272, Ignorance and apathy v safety and health,1972,24,6,189-192,Saunders Guards prevent injuries not errors,1972,24,5,164-165,Hale Liability for accidents caused by poor layout,1972,24,4,118,Poole Safety: accidents in the home,1971,23,12,402,Drysdale Safety: safety devices for belt and other conveyors,1971,23,11,373-374,Drysdale Safety: regulations and programmes,1971,23,10,340-341,Drysdale Safety: training for safety,1971,23,9,305,Drysdale Safety: good housekeeping,1971,23,8,274,Drysdale Safety--paint,1971,23,6,203,Drysdale Safety: cranes,1971,23,5,164,Drysdale Can a knowledge of the Factories Acts reduce accidents?,1971,23,5,153-154,Burrage Safety: by any other name,1980,32,11,583-584,Booth Hazards that fuelled industrial unrest: the background to the Polish strikes,1980,32,10,509-511,Duda-Gwiazda Fire mist and vapours--2,1980,32,8,417-420,Smith Safety: whose responsibility?--2,1980,32,8,409-412,Glendon Fire mist and vapours,1980,32,7,364-368,Smith Safety: explosions - prevention and control,1980,32,7,358-362,Nedved Looking at problems--a new approach to injury records,1980,32,6,286-298,McMillan Safety: reducing the risk of fire,1980,32,5,243-246,Medved Safety: a model code of practice,1980,32,4,187-191,Lavery Production measures put lives of Polish miners at risk,1980,32,3,145-147,Kowalski Safety: burning issues,1980,32,2,96-98,Nedved The safety match,1980,32,2,59, Safety: does too much law cause apathy?,1980,32,1,33-35,Breckin Safety: the price of professional negligence,1979,31,11,522-525,Riley Safety. The how and why of wear: preventing machinery failure,1979,31,9,424-427,Raafat Occupational health: a science?,1979,31,8,397-401,Duncan Safety: constructive criticism,1979,31,6,302-305,Abeytunga How others see us--the OH nurse's view of the safety officer,1979,31,6,290-294,Hamilton Safety: too important a matter to be left to the engineers? Part 2,1979,31,5,228-234,Booth Safety: how to allocate resources to competing safety demands,1979,31,5,260-264,Phillips Safety: making factories safe for fork lift truck drivers,1979,31,4,193-197,Booth Safety: too important a matter to be left to the engineers?,1979,31,4,174-179,Booth Safety: expert power,1979,31,3,147-150,Hale Safety. The electrochemical industry: a survey of the hazards,1979,31,2,88-90,Nedved How others see us--the safety officer's view of the OH nurse,1979,31,2,68-72,Hamilton Paper presented at the Dubrovnik Congress. Designing hazard data sheets,1978,30,12,596-604,Green Case history: high pressure paint gun injuries,1978,30,11,558-563,Booth Safety: when are safety posters effective?,1978,30,11,552-555,McKenna Safety: fitting British Standard man,1978,30,10,498-501,Else Safety: basic concepts of hazards,1978,30,9,439-441,Raafat Safety: improving the lot of the homeworker,1978,30,7,331-333,Clayton Safety: what are statistics worth?,1978,30,6,279-281,Phillips Compensation for accidents,1978,30,5,205-210,Whincup Safety: Maintenance reliability and safety,1978,30,4,177-181,Raafat Safety: counting the near misses,1978,30,3,123-126,Perusse Enter the union safety representative,1978,30,3,110-113,Janner Safety committees - safety reps: who does what?,1978,30,2,67-71,Riley Safety: human kinetics and good movement,1978,30,1,22-25,Mason Lighting the workplace,1977,29,11,474-477,Whittington Accident investigation: collecting the facts?,1977,29,9,400-403,Hale Safety representatives: who should train and who should pay?,1977,29,7,304-307,Glendon The safety of fixed machinery guards,1977,29,4,168-171,Booth The occupational psychologist and health and safety,1977,29,4,150-155,Smith Accidents and failing to cope disease,1977,29,3,115-117,Atherley Safety: who is the safety officer?,1976,28,12,580-582,Hale Safety: the new representatives,1976,28,10,488-490,Glendon Why these divers died,1976,28,7,343-347,Swiss A novel method of collecting information,1976,28,6,302-307,Proctor Safety: inside information,1976,28,5,256-258,Hale Comments on the document (Health and Safety at Work Act),1976,28,5,234-240, Where research is needed,1976,28,4,205-207,Hale Does sex sell safety?,1990,42,10,289-290,Kennedy Personal protective equipment. Protective clothing for chemicals,1989,41,10,301-304,Harris Personal protective equipment. Fall-arrest equipment--what price safety?,1989,41,10,298-300,Crawford Personal protective equipment. Walking safely at work,1989,41,10,276-278,Rees Oil refinery hazards,1988,40,12,728-730,Hutcheson High-pressure injection injuries,1987,39,11,344-345,Creaser Shiftwork. No proper time of day,1987,39,2,54-56,Armstrong Eye injuries from industrial chemicals,1986,38,4,125-127,Salmon Prevention: the name of the game,1985,37,9,400-403,Gill It is not the welder who risks arc eye,1984,36,5,207-208,Whyte Environmental investigation and control. 2. Assessment and action--II,1984,36,3,114-120,Wreford Safety department chopped,1984,36,1,20-22,Booth Safety: product liability--a need for change,1983,35,12,555-560,Raafat Alcohol and the OH role. 2. Prevention of alcoholism,1983,35,10,447-457,Molloy RoSPA breaks with tradition,1983,35,8,371-374,Hamilton Safety: acceptable to you?,1983,35,8,349-353,Hale Who makes the decisions about health and safety?,1983,35,7,325-327,Glendon First aid and home safety training in the community,1983,35,3,122-129,McKenna OH and safety problems and the Third World,1983,35,2,74-77,Lukindo Safety: catching them young,1982,34,11,517-520,Glendon Safety: preventing gas explosions,1982,34,10,478-481,Raafat Hazards for radiomen on oil-rigs,1982,34,5,213-215,Wyte Colour vision at work,1981,33,11,573-578,Ross Safety: machinery safety--reinventing the wheel,1981,33,11,567-570,Booth Safety: the Fault Tree accident analysis,1981,33,8,419-423,Raafat Hungary's approach to safety,1981,33,5,252-255,Rich Safety: what does responsibility mean?,1981,33,5,245-250,Glendon Building up hygiene and safety,1981,33,4,180-183,Hamilton Safety: accident reporting - a guide to the new regulations,1981,33,1,40-42,Phillips First aid alarm device,1965,17,4,188-190,Tyler Problems relating to adolescents and changing patterns in our society,1968,20,5,266-277,Bissell Working in a hot environment,1993,45,8,275-277,Williams Policing the railways: the unexpected risk,1993,45,8,273-274,Chorley Violence in the workplace,1994,46,5,166-167,Goldman Soft tissue injuries in the police force,1994,46,5,159-160,Evans Practise makes perfect: disaster management,1996,48,4,130-132,Nutbrown Is human error the cause of accident and disaster?,1993,45,5,169-70 172,Horan Are your employees fit to drive?,1995,47,3,86-90,Boorman The epileptic worker,1980,32,3,137-139,Graig EU health and safety. A vision for the future,1997,49,3,106,Graham Limits of the law,1995,47,8,279-280,Goldman For each his own: the self-rescuer apparatus against CO,1970,22,4,107-111,Place Suicide in the workplace,1996,48,7,247-249,Spiers Vested interest in visual welfare,1971,23,3,85-89,Ure Eye injuries? How many can be prevented?,1971,23,3,75-79,Carr Fire prevention research,1972,24,8,290-291,Andrews Eye hazards in industry,1982,34,2,69-72,Voke Effects of heat and its control,1976,28,8,390-393,Mckenna Occupational eye injuries--treatment in a nurse-based service,1977,29,6,235-240,McMillan Disaster planning for industry,1977,29,9,385-392,Brown The control of new toxic substances,1977,29,12,528-530,Levy Safe use of lasers,1978,30,5,220-222,Lavery Precision foundry hazards,1980,32,3,123-127,Coombs Mine rescue workers: their perceived health and absence from work,1981,33,2,70-74,Mckenna Safety noise and communication,1981,33,6,291-296,Hamilton Safety: the scrutiny and control of new toxic substances,1981,33,7,365-367,Levy London's burning: Ramazzini's view,1985,37,1,28-33, Case history: alcohol interaction with a workplace chemical,1979,31,5,265-267,Lyle Making contingency studies for a nuclear disaster,1979,31,5,238-239,Hewitt Cadmium - working with a poison,1980,32,7,341-346,Critchley Safety: how well does the Factory Inspectorate travel?,1978,30,8,381-383,Brecken Safety: a breath of fresh air,1979,31,8,422-425,Else Safety: fire-prevention and control,1980,32,12,635-637,Nedved Safety: exporting British expertise,1982,34,6,273-274,Breckin Safety: why not act to prevent falls?,1983,35,4,180-181,Breckin OH on the fireground,1988,40,1,424-426,Wright Safety training 3: are you getting what you paid for?,1982,34,5,233-235,Hale