RI 2453 Morbidity Studies as an Aid in Preventing Illness Among Miners

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 1485 KB
- Publication Date:
- Mar 1, 1923
Abstract
Mine operators and managers for a number of years have known that the maintenance of health among the workers has an appreciable financial value, In order to maintain the health, it has been found ne cessery to imow;
1. The health hazards existing in the industry as a whole and the specific hazard in the individual mine.
2. The physical condition of applicants for employment as well as that of the old employees. This can be determined only by systematic physical examination of all applicants and of regular employees at intervals of at least once a year thereafter.
3. All cases of sickness that occur among the workers.
No operator or manager, or personnel, medical, or safety organization can control or prevent sickness without knowing where, when, and under what conditions the sickness actually occurs. In order to obtain information as to the hazards of industry, investigations have been and are being made of the effects of the condi- tions both in the field under usual working practices and in the laboratory. In the field several factors are generally present which affect the health. The effect of these factors may be determined by studying each of them separately in the laboratory. However, both the field and the laboratory studies are limited in value in that such studies usually have been made over a comparatively short period. While we have some information as to their immediate effect, we do not know to what extent extreme heat, humidity, the presence of dust or other health hazards are the cause of disability.
Mortality statistics are probably the most easily available indices as to the hazards of industry. As an example, a study of such statistics among coal miners of Indiana shows a marked increase in the death rate in 1918.
Citation
APA:
(1923) RI 2453 Morbidity Studies as an Aid in Preventing Illness Among MinersMLA: RI 2453 Morbidity Studies as an Aid in Preventing Illness Among Miners. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.