State-based Occupational Health Surveillance Clearinghouse
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Page 5 of 106 matching documents.
  • How to clean take-home lead from your Home and Vehicle

    If you think your vehicle or home may be contaminated with lead: Have your family tested for lead in their blood. Consider hiring a lead removal professional. They can ensure your home is clean and safe. Call the SHARP Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology Surveillance (ABLES) program at 1-888-667-4277 or the Department of Health Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention (CLPP) at 1-800-909-9898.
    Washington — Other — 4/1/2014 — 4 Views
  • CDPH Health-based Permissible Exposure Limit Recommendation for Lead

    Presentation by Barbara Materna, Chief of the Occupational Health Branch, at Lead in the Workplace – The New Science, a symposium on the science behind the California Department of Public Health's recommended revisions to the Cal/OSHA lead standards. Sponsored by the Center for Occupational and Environmental Health Continuing Education.
    California — Other — 11/13/2013 — 5 Views
  • Video: "Lead in the Workplace -- the New Science" Symposium

    YouTube videos of a one-day symposium on the science behind the California Department of Public Health's recommended revisions to the Cal/OSHA lead standards. Sponsored by the Center for Occupational and Environmental Health Continuing Education, the symposium covered the current literature on health effects of low-level lead exposure and the newly released Cal/EPA report on physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling of the air lead/blood lead relationship. More »
    California — Multi-Media — 11/13/2013 — 5 Views
  • OHW: CDPH Calls for New Limit on Workplace Lead

    Occupational Health Watch is a periodic publication that highlights key occupational health surveillance findings and related prevention activities of the Occupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health. More »
    California — Newsletter — 11/4/2013 — 5 Views
  • Estimating Workplace Air and Worker Blood Lead Concentration (general public summary)

    Summary for general public of a report produced by the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA), California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA) characterizing the relationship between air lead levels and blood lead levels. Full report title is "Estimating Workplace Air and Worker Blood Lead Concentration Using an Updated Physiologically-based Pharmacokinetic (PBPK) Model".
    California — Technical Report — 10/1/2013 — 5 Views
  • Estimating Workplace Air and Worker Blood Lead Concentration (health professional summary)

    Summary for health professionals of a report produced by the Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA), California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA) characterizing the relationship between air lead levels and blood lead levels. Full report title is "Estimating Workplace Air and Worker Blood Lead Concentration Using an Updated Physiologically-based Pharmacokinetic (PBPK) Model",
    California — Technical Report — 10/1/2013 — 5 Views
  • Recommended Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) for Lead - Letter to Cal/OSHA

    Letter to head of Cal/OSHA presenting the CA Department of Public Health's health-based recommendation for the limit in workplace air (permissible exposure limit or PEL) for lead.
    California — Other — 9/30/2013 — 5 Views
  • Template for Letter to Employer re: Workplace Lead Exposure

    Template health care providers can use to write a letter to an employer regarding cccupational exposure to lead and medical removal protection for a pregnant worker or female worker who is planning to conceive. Adapted to reflect California’s Lead Standards from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) publication, “Guidelines for the Identification and Management of Lead Exposure in Pregnant and Lactating Women”, November 2010.
    California — Other — 7/25/2013 — 5 Views
  • OHW: Lead Still a Health Concern for California Workers

    Occupational Health Watch is a periodic publication that highlights key occupational health surveillance findings and related prevention activities of the Occupational Health Branch, California Department of Public Health. June 2013 edition is about a new report from the California Occupational Blood Lead Registry showing that thousands of California workers are still being exposed to lead and have elevated blood lead levels.
    California — Newsletter — 6/5/2013 — 5 Views
  • Blood Lead Levels in California Workers, 2008-2011

    Comprehensive technical report from the California Occupational Blood Lead Registry discusses the limitations of data, presents the key surveillance findings for 2008-2011, and briefly reviews program efforts to improve tracking of work-related lead overexposure. Includes data tables and analysis.
    California — Technical Report — 5/1/2013 — 5 Views
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