Post: Jour Env & Occ Health Policy Great Articles!!Posted by Sharon on 10/01/08
Dear All,
The new JEOHP is out. Some great articles about too much
corporate influence over environmental medicine.
Sharon
http://baywood.metapress.com/app/home/issue.asp?
referrer=parent&backto=journal,1,42;linkingpublicationresult
s,1:300327,1
NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational
Health Policy 1 to 15 of 15
Issue: Volume 18, Number 3 / 2008
URL: Linking Options
Editorial: Some Notes on the Politics of Occupational
Medicine pp. 283 - 284
Charles Levenstein
Occupational Medicine and the Construction
of "Difficult Reputations" pp. 285 - 298
Tee L. Guidotti
Difficult Reputations and the Social Reality of
Occupational Medicine pp. 299 - 316
Elaine Draper
Beyond Reputation: Debate on the Role of Corporate
Influence in Occupational and Environmental Medicine pp.
317 - 324
Susanna Rankin Bohme and David Egilman
"Guidotti Fails to Convince" on Two Issues pp. 325 -
328
Michael B. Lax
Protecting Disaster Site, Support, and Recovery
Workers pp. 329 - 332
James Celenza
Toward Tomorrow pp. 333 - 335
Charles Levenstein
Open Letter about Proposed Changes for UNC-SPH—"Don't
Lose the Mission" pp. 337 - 341
Nancy Holt
Asbestos Disease in Australia: Looking Forward and
Looking Back pp. 361 - 373
A. D. Lamontagne, C. E. Hunter, D. Vallance, A. J.
Holloway
The Latrobe Valley: Perspectives on Asbestos Issues
pp. 375 - 378
Vicki Hamilton
"Make History But Don'T Forget The Past" pp. 379 -
382
Geoff Swayn
James Hardie Asbestos Victims Compensation Summary
pp. 383 - 390
Is OSHA Working for Working People? pp. 391 - 403
David Michaels
So why are There No Warning Labels on Your Contract?
pp. 405 - 407
Katherine Lippel
Contributors
NEW SOLUTIONS: A Journal of Environmental and Occupational
Health Policy
Issue: Volume 18, Number 3 / 2008
Pages: 317 - 324
URL: Linking Options
Beyond Reputation: Debate on the Role of Corporate
Influence in Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Susanna Rankin Bohme and David Egilman
Abstract:
In his article in this issue, Tee Guidotti casts recent
works addressing corporate influence on occupational
medicine as "collective act[s] of disparagement …
undertaken … for political reasons." We move beyond the
question of reputation to address key conflicts in the
history of occupational medicine, including the American
Occupational Medical Association's historical role in
weakening the beryllium standard and the American College
of Occupational and Environmental Medicine's recent efforts
to limit the extent of the Family Medical Leave Act. The
corporate practice of externalizing health and safety costs
makes industry influence an important ongoing topic of
debate in occupational and environmental medicine.
Posts on this thread, including this one
Jour Env & Occ Health Policy Great Articles!!, 10/01/08, by Sharon. Re: Jour Env & Occ Health Policy Great Articles!!, 10/01/08, by Myco X.
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