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Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2002;59:721-722; doi:10.1136/oem.59.11.721
Copyright © 2002 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2002;59:721-722
© 2002 Occupational and Environmental Medicine

EDITORIAL

Risk analysis

Silicosis in the twenty first century

D Sherson

Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Vejle County Hospital, Denmark

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr D Sherson, Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Vejle County Hospital, 7100 Vejle, Denmark;
Davshe@vs.vejleamt.dk


The current permissible exposure limit is inadequate to protect workers

Keywords: silicosis; lung cancer; mortality; permissible exposure limit

Abbreviations: HRCT, high resolution computed tomography; IARC, International Agency for Research on Cancer; ILO, International Labour Office; PEL, permissible exposure limit; REL, recommended exposure limit; TWA, time weighted average

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Silicosis (Latin, silex, flint) is perhaps the oldest occupational disease, probably existing in the paleolithic period. Hippocrates and Pliny refer to the disorder. Some of the most tragic and wanton examples of occupational disease were due to silicosis, for example, how table blade grinding in Sheffield (1886) robbed workers of 25 years of life, or the Gauley Bridge disaster in West Virginia (1931). Perusing a recent standard pulmonary medicine textbook would suggest that simple silicosis is no longer a problem as it is "not associated with impairment or disability and even without effect on longevity in many although not all".1 Case closed, the silicosis story is over, or is it?

In this issue of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, t’ Mannetje and co-workers answer this question with an elegant and resounding "no"!2 In a carefully designed pooled analysis a clear exposure-response relation for silicosis and mortality is . . . [Full text of this article]


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