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u s department of labor
Articles tagged with u s department of labor
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INFORMATION DATE 19891017 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights-Access to Employee Exposure and Medical Records SUBJECT Access to Employee Exposure and Medical Records U.S. Department of Labor Prog...
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INFORMATION DATE 19901212 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights-Amended Powered Platform Standard STANDARD NUMBER 1910.66 SUBJECT Amended Powered Platform Standard ABSTRACT More modern job safety r...
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INFORMATION DATE 19890626 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights, Back Injuries SUBJECT Back Injuries3/4 Nation's Number One Workplace Safety Problem U. S. Department of Labo...
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INFORMATION DATE 19920218, DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights, Protection Against Asbestos STANDARD NUMBER 1910.1001; 1926.58...
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INFORMATION DATE 19920818 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights, Carbon Monoxide Poisoning TOPIC Carbon Monoxide SUBJECT Carbon Monoxide Poisoning ABSTRACT Carbon mono...
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Small businesses have not made the same progress as large businesses in developing drug abuse programs due to a lack of...
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INFORMATION DATE 19890613 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights - Control of Hazardous Energy Sources (Lock-out/Tagout) STANDARD NUMBER 1910.1450 SUBJECT Control of Hazardous...
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INFORMATION DATE 19920218 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights-Cotton Dust TOPIC Cotton Dust STANDARD NUMBER 1910.1043 SUBJECT Cotton Dust ABSTRACT Cotton dust...
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INFORMATION DATE 19891003 DESCRIPTION USDOL Program Highlights, Discrimination Protection for Trucking Employees SUBJECT Discrimination protection for trucking employees U.S...
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On June 22, 1984, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued a standard which set a limit on worker exposure to ethylene oxide (EtO) averaged over an either hour day to protect about 68,000 workers exposed to the substance. The standard was amended April 6, 1988, to further reduce the health risk associated with EtO by requiring control of short-term exposure to EtO as well. Workers primarily employed by hospitals and medical products manufacturers will benefit most from the 1988 amendment.