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Human Ecology
The Environment of the Workplace and Suicide
     Suicide has been tracked as an index of despair in society in the folklore and literature of Western countries for a long time. An early definitive study linked occupation to the stresses that lead to despair, and despair to suicide. Thomas Masaryk, the founding President of Czechoslovakia, in his doctoral thesis, published in 1881, on suicide in Central Europe, where suicide was common, especially among urban industrial workers, and becoming more frequent. He attributed this to despair, the “sequellae” he read about in the works of Goethe, published at the turn of that century. MORE

Applied Human Ecology
The Key To Risk Communication
     In the early 1970s, soon after passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, it was apparent that the new law, even if perfectly enforced with perfect standards, would not remedy the problem of workers who had been left behind: those for whom the new law was too late because of past exposures to asbestos, radiation and other toxic agents. For these workers, the seeds of disease had already been planted, and reducing future exposure might reduce, but not eliminate the risk of cancer, lung scarring and other disorders. Another and separate initiative had to be taken for these workers. Its initiator, Irving J. Selikoff, called it: “High Risk Management”. And the key to its success is risk communication.
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Last modified on
Saturday, November 06, 2004