Page 131 of 1847 matching documents.
TIRES publication from the Safety And Health Assessment And Research for Prevention -- SHARP -- program of the State Department of Labor & Industries. « Less
Washington — Brochure — 12/10/2010 — 1 Views
TIRES publication from the Safety And Health Assessment And Research for Prevention -- SHARP -- program of the State Department of Labor & Industries. « Less
Washington — Newsletter — 12/1/2010 — 1 Views
Occupational Health publication from the Safety And Health Assessment And Research for Prevention -- SHARP -- program of the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries « Less
Washington — Technical Report — 12/1/2010 — 1 Views
TIRES publication from the Safety And Health Assessment And Research for Prevention -- SHARP -- program of the State Department of Labor & Industries. « Less
Washington — Other — 11/24/2010 — 1 Views
Summary of fatal workplace incident in which a orchard laborer died after his jacket sleeve got caught in an unguarded, rotating PTO shaft. « Less
Washington — Case Report — 11/12/2010 — 0 Views
The prevention of work-related musculoskeletal disorders has become a national priority in many countries. Increasingly, attempts are made to quantify those exposures that increase risk in order to set exposure limit values. « Less
Washington — Journal Article — 11/10/2010 — 1 Views
Summary of a fatal incident in which a crane rigger died when the rigging straps on a crane failed and the load fell onto the rigger. « Less
Washington — Case Report — 11/5/2010 — 0 Views
Summary of fatal incident in which a construction laborer died after being struck by the boom of an excavator when it tipped over. « Less
Washington — Case Report — 11/3/2010 — 0 Views
Although urinary 1,6-hexamethylene diamine (HDA) is a useful biomarker of exposure to 1,6-hexamethylene diisocyanate (HDI), a large degree of unexplained intra- and inter-individual variability exists between estimated HDI exposure and urine HDA levels. « Less
Washington — Journal Article — 10/26/2010 — 1 Views
To test the inter-rater reliability of physical examinations for upper extremity musculoskeletal disorders. A total of 111 subjects were examined by both an occupational medicine physician and a physical therapist, who were blinded to each others' tests results and subjects' current symptoms and health histories. « Less
Washington — Journal Article — 10/1/2010 — 1 Views