Patty's Industrial Hygiene 2001
DOI: 10.1002/0471435139.hyg041
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The History and Biological Basis of Occupational Exposure Limits for Chemical Agents

Abstract: Over the past 60 years, many organizations in numerous countries have proposed occupational exposure limits (OELs) for airborne contaminants (1). The limits or guidelines that have been the most widely accepted both in the United States and in most other countries are those issued annually by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) and are termed Threshold Limit Values Ò (TLVs) (1-10).The usefulness of establishing OELs for potentially harmful agents in the working environment has… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This distinction between binding and non-binding limits can become blurred, however, as some regulatory authorities adopt non-binding OELs under existing rulemaking authority. For example, the ACGIH TLVs are adopted as de facto legally binding standards in many Canadian provinces, (3,15) various European countries, (2) and many other countries around the world. (16–18) Moreover, distinctions can be made between “health-based” OELs and those that are “regulatory-adjusted,” (8) with the latter involving consideration of technical and economic feasibility.…”
Section: Availability Of Traditional International Oel Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This distinction between binding and non-binding limits can become blurred, however, as some regulatory authorities adopt non-binding OELs under existing rulemaking authority. For example, the ACGIH TLVs are adopted as de facto legally binding standards in many Canadian provinces, (3,15) various European countries, (2) and many other countries around the world. (16–18) Moreover, distinctions can be made between “health-based” OELs and those that are “regulatory-adjusted,” (8) with the latter involving consideration of technical and economic feasibility.…”
Section: Availability Of Traditional International Oel Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Practices in some organizations might limit the selection of the critical studies to those that are available in the open literature, whereas others might allow for the use of data sourced outside the international public domain (e.g., industrial research, internal reports), which can stimulate controversy due to limited transparency and selectivity being suspected or inferred. (17,46) Moreover, some organizations might use the highest quality studies available, resulting in a large percentage of OELs based on animal studies (e.g., in 2009, approximately 50% of the ACGIH TLVs were based on animal data), (3) whereas others might favor key study selection based on human data. Once a critical toxicity endpoint (e.g., the most sensitive effect) has been selected, organizational practices can also affect the selection of the POD, a specific exposure level that is derived from the critical studies and upon which the OEL is grounded.…”
Section: Availability Of Traditional International Oel Resourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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