A Strategy for Assessing and Managing Occupational Exposures

Front Cover
 

Contents

Tables Used in this Book
3
Exposure Assessment Model
13
1
23
1
119
Stressors
131
2
144
might be lost to evaporation or skin absorption prior to sampling
153
Application of the Exposure Assessment and Strategies Model 195
196
1
337
Appendix IV
341
1
342
3
349
8
356
5
361
10
363
12
369

Decision Making
236
2
241
3
247
Chapter 24
257
1
263
Definitions of Exposure Predictor Solids EPS Definitions of Exposure Predictor Liquids EPL Bands
269
Appendices
285
CNFSS distribution for a worker in the near field zone
302
3
309
2
319
Appendix III
335
Confidence limit for the exceedance fraction f vs the calculated zvalue
373
Appendix V
375
1
380
2
386
Appendix VII
391
1
402
Analysis of Censored Data
415
1 The logprobit curves corresponding to the GM and GSD estimates from Table VIII 1
419
Appendix IX
423
Index
435
Copyright

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Page 433 - refer to airborne concentrations of substances and represent conditions under which it is believed that nearly all workers may be repeatedly exposed day after day without adverse effect.
Page 433 - Average (TLV-TWA) — the time- weighted average (TWA) concentration for a normal 8-hour workday and a 40-hour workweek, to which nearly all workers may be repeatedly exposed, day after day, without adverse effect.

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