Hollins Dana M, Paustenbach Dennis J, Clark Katherine, Mangold Carl A
ChemRisk, San Francisco, California, USA.
J Toxicol Environ Health B Crit Rev. 2009 Feb;12(2):124-56. doi: 10.1080/10937400902729176.
The study of occupational exposure to asbestos has been an ongoing activity for at least 75 years, dating back to the papers of Merewether and Price (1930). Since that time, literally tens of thousands of air samples have been collected in an attempt to characterize the concentration of asbestos associated with various activities. Many of the individuals who developed diseases from the 1970s to the current day were often exposed to very high airborne concentrations because of direct or indirect exposure to either raw asbestos fiber or insulation during the approximate 1940-1970 time period. Often, these high exposures were associated with work in shipyards during and after World War II and the Korean War, as well as with decommissioning, which continued into the mid-1970s. This study reviews the historical asbestos concentrations measured in shipyards and presents a visual illustration of typical conditions and work practices. A majority of the photographs presented in this article depict work conditions at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, circa 1940-1965, which is representative of other military shipyards of the time.
对职业性接触石棉的研究至少已经持续了75年,可追溯到梅里韦瑟和普赖斯1930年发表的论文。从那时起,为了确定与各种活动相关的石棉浓度,人们确实采集了数以万计的空气样本。从20世纪70年代到现在患上疾病的许多人,在大约1940年至1970年期间,由于直接或间接接触原石棉纤维或绝缘材料,往往接触到非常高的空气中石棉浓度。通常,这些高接触率与第二次世界大战和朝鲜战争期间及战后造船厂的工作有关,也与持续到20世纪70年代中期的退役工作有关。本研究回顾了造船厂测量的历史石棉浓度,并直观展示了典型的工作条件和工作方式。本文中的大多数照片描绘了1940年至1965年左右普吉特海湾海军造船厂的工作条件,这代表了当时其他军事造船厂的情况。