I. Recommendations for a Xylene Standard
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- editorial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
- Vol. 18 (8) , 561-570
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00043764-197608000-00012
Abstract
Hypertension can be considered work-related and, therefore, compensable when it [occurs] causes cardiac disease in occupational groups for whom cardiac ailments are legislated as being work-incurred and in workers exposed to certain nitrate explosives. In legal circles job related stresses are often invoked as a cause of hypertension and judicial precedent has accepted the medically unproven theory that hypertension develops after an exposure for long hours over a period of several years to the exasperations, frustrations, pressures, strains, and stresses of work. Apportionment of liability between industrial and nonindustrial factors is a legal concept with negotiations often open to forensic debate. This could be minimized if epidemiologic information permitting the calculation of attributable risk were available. Also desirable is a better understanding of the possible contributions of common physical hazards e.g., noise and vibration, to sustained hypertension.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: