
Physicians and industrial hygienists in the U.S. and Europe have assumed that silica, a known toxic dust which causes diseases such as silicosis and corpulmonale, does not cause cancer. However the evidence presented in this volume, drawn from a 1984 symposium on the subject of silica and cancer, suggests that there is a strong link between cancer and silica in the workplace. This book discusses the full range of work being done on silica and cancer, including a history of studies on the silica-cancer relationship; experiments describing the carcinogenic effect of silica on animals; up-to-date reports on the risks of lung cancer; the need for protective measures against particulate exposure, and epidemologic research on workers in the so-called dusty trades. Silica, Silicosis and Cancer also offers suggestions for changes and regulation of industries using silica.
This volume investigates the contentious medical and scientific debate regarding whether occupational exposure to silica dust acts as a carcinogenic agent in humans. Editor David F. Goldsmith compiles research from a 1984 symposium to challenge the prevailing medical consensus of the era, which largely dismissed a causal link between silica and cancer. The text synthesizes experimental animal data, historical study reviews, and epidemiological findings to argue that current industrial safety standards may be insufficient to protect workers in high-risk trades.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant historical document that helped shift the medical discourse surrounding occupational lung disease. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which is tailored specifically for physicians, industrial hygienists, and public health researchers.
Page Count:
536
Publication Date:
1986-01-01
Publisher:
Praeger
ISBN-10:
0030041996
ISBN-13:
9780030041990
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