LandriganP. and MarkowitzS., Occupational Disease in New York State, Report to the New York State Legislature, February 1987.
2.
TuminaroD.“Organizing for a Statewide Network of Occupational Disease Diagnostic Clinics,”New Solutions1 (1990): 18–20.
3.
BermanD.Death on the Job, New York and London: Monthly Review Press, 1978.
4.
BayerR. Ed. The Health and Safety of Workers, New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988.
5.
RosnerD. and MarkowitzG.Deadly Dust. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991.
6.
Matt London, New York State Department of Health (personal communication).
7.
See Landrigan, Op. Cit.
8.
YassiA.“The Development of Worker-Controlled Occupational Health Centers in Canada,”American Journal of Public Health, 78 (1988): 689–693.
9.
American Academy of Industrial Hygiene Newsletter, Fall 1991, provides a good example of this mentality.
10.
TarlauE.“Playing Industrial Hygiene to Win,”New Solutions1(1991): 72–82.
11.
CastlemanB.I., and ZiemG.E., “Corporate Influence on TLVs,”American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 13: 531–559, 1988.
12.
NavarroV.“The Labor Process and Health: A Historical Materialist Interpretation” in Crisis, Health, and Medicine A Social Critique, New York and London: Tavistock Publications, 1986.
13.
See Bayer, Op. Cit.
14.
NavarroV.“Work, Ideology, and Science: The Case of Medicine” in Crisis, Health, and Medicine A Social Critique. New York and London: Tavistock Publications, 1986.
15.
WegmanD.H.“Byssinosis: A Role for Public Health in the Face of Scientific Uncertainty,”American Journal of Public Health, 1983, 23: 188–192.
16.
FreireP.Pedagogy of the Oppressed, New York: Continuum Publishing Co., 1987.
17.
WallersteinN. and RubensteinH., Eds., Worker Education Manual for Occupational Health Clinics, Unpublished Manuscript.
18.
CullenM.. “Occupational Medicine,”New England Journal of Medicine, 322 (1990): 594–601 and 675–683.
19.
WeinbergB., “Toxic Racism' Dumps on Low-Income Communities,”The Guardian, September 14, 1991.
20.
HarrisonB. and BluestoneB., The Great U-Turn: Corporate Restructuring and the Polarizing of America, New York: Basic Books, 1988.
21.
See Navarro, “The Labor Process and Health: A Historical Materialist Interpretation,” Op. Cit.
22.
LevensteinC. and TuminaroD., “The Political Economy of Occupational Disease,”New Solutions, 2 (1991): 25–34.
23.
ClaysonZ. and HalpernJ., “Changes in the Workplace: Implications for Occupational Safety and Health,”Journal of Public Health Policy (1983): 279–297.
24.
See Landrigan and Markowitz, Op. Cit.
25.
ZolothS., “Asbestos Screening by Non-Specialists: Results of an Evaluation,”American Journal of Public Health, 76 (1986): 1392–1395.
26.
GuidottiT. and KuetzingB., “Competition and Despecialization: An Analytical Study of Occupational Health Services in San Diego, 1974–1984,”American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 8 (1985): 155–165.
27.
McCunneyR., “A Hospital-Based Occupational Health Service,”Journal Of Occupational Medicine26 (1984): 375–380.
28.
ArlingL., “Industrial Clinics and Occupational Medicine,”Archives of Environmental Health12 (1966): 644–646.
29.
KleinmanG. and MorrisS., “The University's Role in Occupational Health: A Model from Washington State,”New Solutions1 (1991): 63–71.
30.
RosenstockL. and HeyerN., “Emergence of Occupational Medical Services Outside the Workplace,”American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 3 (1982): 217–223.
31.
RosenstockL.“Hospital-Based, Academically Affiliated Occupational Medicine Clinics,”American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 6 (1984) 155–158.
32.
OrrisP., “Activities of an Employer-Independent Occupational Medicine Clinic, Cook County Hospital, 1979–1981,”American Journal of Public Health72 (1982): 1165–1167.