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230 listed. Updated Feb 16, 2010 |
Agitate or pump liquid manure or enter manure pit
Apply arsenic preservatives to wood
Apply coal tar pitch to cables, pipes, or roofs
Apply organochlorine insecticides
Arc weld aluminum
Arc weld stainless steel
Assemble or repair auto brakes or clutches (asbestos)
Assemble products using cyanoacrylate glues
Before 1975, mixed, sprayed, or sanded asbestos materials
Blast, drill, remove, or crush rock, concrete or brick
Braze using cadmium-based solder
Care for children or animals infected with cryptosporidiosis
Care for children or primates infected with hepatitis A
Care for sick patients (bloodborne pathogens)
Care for sick patients (droplet/airborne pathogens)
Care for sick patients (fecal-oral pathogens)
Clean pools or aquariums
Clean up equipment with solvents
Clean, repair, or dismantle oil-fired furnaces or boilers
Compound plastics using lead stabilizers
Contaminate skin or inhale spray--pentachlorophenol
Cut and dry rayon filaments
Decompose chlorinated solvents
Decompose fluoropolymers (Teflon)
Degrease metal
Develop color photographs with amine compounds
Disinfect or sterilize medical equipment
Dry clean with organic solvents
Dye fur with compounds containing amines
Dye or bleach hair, or use ethanolamines in beauty culture
Eat undercooked meat or fish
Enter a farm silo 1-10 days after filling
Extract coal
Extract mercury ore (cinnabar)
Fabricate measuring devices containing mercury
Formulate, mold, or cure resins to make composites
Galvanize metal
Gas or arc weld on galvanized metal
Gas weld or cut in a confined space
Generate bioaerosols from milk, eggs, or animal serum
Generate bioaerosols of animal-derived proteins
Generate bioaerosols of biological enzymes
Generate bioaerosols of Chinese red rice
Generate bioaerosols processing or packing food products
Generate bioaerosols processing seafood
Generate dusts from Plexiglas or polyvinyl chloride
Generate flour dust
Generate grain dust
Generate guar gum bioaerosols
Generate insect-derived bioaerosols
Generate latex dust in manufacturing latex products
Generate latex dust using latex products
Generate mists of ethanolamines in metalworking fluids
Generate plant-derived bioaerosols
Generate psyllium dust
Grind or cut tiles, stones, concrete, bricks, or terrazzo
Grind, mix, or weigh dyes or apply dyes to textiles
Handle domestic animals (inhalation or percutaneous)
Handle flowers
Handle infected animal tissue
Handle infected chickens or birds
Handle infected dog or cat (bite or scratch)
Handle infected laboratory rats or mice
Handle infected macaque monkeys
Handle infected rodents (bite)
Handle infected rodents (inhalation or percutaneous)
Handle laboratory animals
Handle limes, celery, parsnips, or figs
Handle medical needles or surgical instruments
Handle MetHgb-inducing chemicals
Handle rabid animal (bite)
Handle raw goat hair, wool, or hides
Handle skin sensitizers--ACD or contact urticaria
Have contact with dogs or cats (fecal-oral exposure)
Heat or machine chromium alloys
Heat or machine cobalt alloys
Heat or machine manganese alloys
Heat polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene, or polypropylene
Heat, machine, or spray lead products
Ingest infectious agents in food or water
Ingest toxins in food or water
Inhale aspergillus in production plant
Inhale bioaerosols in home, school, or office environment
Inhale bioaerosols of moldy compost
Inhale bioaerosols of moldy hay, silage, straw, or grain
Inhale dust in livestock confinement building
Inhale insect allergens in fish food or fish bait
Inhale insect allergens in the laboratory
Inhale mists during plastics injection molding
Inhale mists of metalworking fluids
Inhale mite allergens farming or handling flour or grain
Inhale moldy wood dust
Inhale petroleum vapors containing benzene
Inhale plant mold or slime mold
Inhale Rhizopus nigricans in a coal mine
Installed insulation before 1975
Load or dump dusty rock, stone, or sand
Machine or weld on cadmium steel
Machine wood and inhale dust
Make asbestos products
Make beryllium-containing products
Make cadmium-containing products
Make foundry molds using MDI, furfuryl alcohol, or amines
Make products from fibrogenic minerals
Manually "lay-up" reinforced polyester resins using styrene
Manufacture and repair mercury fluorescent lights
Manufacture arsenical pesticides
Manufacture cemented carbide materials or tools
Manufacture isothiazolinones
Manufacture lead products
Manufacture or use mercury dental amalgams
Manufacture pesticides containing captafol
Manufacture rosin core solder
Mine asbestos
Mine or crush chromium ores
Mine or crush manganese ores
Mix and apply bone adhesives
Mix or apply organophosphates or work in sprayed fields
Mix or pack pharmaceutical products
Operate internal combustion engine--inadequate ventilation
Paint or varnish, oil-based
Plate metal with cadmium
Plate metal with chromium
Plate metal with nickel
Plow, dig, or excavate soil in endemic area
Prepare fruit salad with solution of pectinase and glucanase
Prepare potatoes using metabisulfite powder
Prepare, card, or spin natural vegetable fibers
Produce chromium alloys or chromate pigments
Produce nacre buttons from mollusc shells
Produce silk (sericulture)
Produced rubber with long-term exposures to curing fumes
Raise bird or bat dust in endemic area
Raise dust of excreta from rodents
Raise farm dust contaminated with Francisella tularensis
Reclaim scrap metal (lead, cadmium, beryllium or mercury)
Remove cadmium coatings
Remove chromate-containing paints by abrasive blasting
Remove insulation installed before 1975
Remove lead coatings
Remove or replace PCB contaminated fluid in transformers
Repair or maintain gasoline or jet fuel tanks
Repeatedly debark maple trees to obtain sap
Repeatedly inhale bioaerosols of bird droppings
Repeatedly inhale bioaerosols of cheese (Penicillum sp.)
Repeatedly inhale bioaerosols of moldy barley
Repeatedly inhale bioaerosols of moldy sugarcane bagasse
Repeatedly inhale bioaerosols of moldy wood pulp
Repeatedly inhale dust harvesting peat moss
Repeatedly inhale dust of moldy esparto grass
Repeatedly inhale dust of moldy greenhouse soil
Repeatedly inhale dust of moldy tobacco
Repeatedly inhale moldy cork dust
Repeatedly inhale soy sauce fermentation starter
Repeatedly prepare, card, or spin natural vegetable fibers
Saw or sand arsenic-treated wood
Saw or sand creosote-treated wood
Smelt or cast lead
Smelt or refine zinc or copper
Spray and resand chromate-containing paints
Spray chlorothalonil or tetramethrin (pesticides)
Spray epoxy or polyurethane coatings
Spray paints or glazes containing cadmium pigments
Spray polyurethane foam insulation
Sterilize equipment with ethylene oxide
Touch (barefooted) contaminated soil in endemic area
Touch infected farm animals
Touch infected fish or shellfish
Touch infected meat or poultry
Touch thorns, splinters, or spaghum moss
Travel to endemic area with inadequate protection
Use abrasives containing silica or silicon carbide
Use acrylamide for grouting
Use anhydride compounds to make chemical products
Use azodicarbonamide as additive to plastics and rubber
Use benzene to manufacture products
Use carbon disulfide as fumigant
Use cemented carbide materials or tools
Use chloramine-T for cleaning or disinfecting
Use chromates or dichromates in printing
Use chromates or dichromates in tanning
Use dental acrylate compounds
Use diazonium salts to manufacture photocopy paper
Use diisocyanates to manufacture polyurethane products
Use epoxy, isocyanate, or formaldehyde-resin products
Use ethanolamines in cleaning products
Use ferromanganese in alloy production
Use formaldehyde or glutaraldehyde in radiology darkroom
Use hand-held saw or grinder to remove brick mortar
Use manganese-containing welding rods
Use mercury to extract gold
Use methacrylates to apply artificial fingernails
Use n-hexane in glues, inks, coatings, or degreasers
Use polyfunctional aziridine hardener in coatings
Use sodium cyanide to recover silver
Use solder containing allergenic flux
Use solvents in printing (platemaking or solvent-based inks)
Use tetrazene to manufacture detonators
Victim--air release of chemicals/toxins/radiation
Victim--air release of infectious agents
Victim--contamination of water/food
Weld mild steel
Weld on metal painted with chlorinated polyester paint
Weld or machine on beryllium-containing alloys
Work as cement floorer with exposure to chromate salts
Work continuously with wet hands
Work for years as a dental technician
Work in a medical or research laboratory
Work in building infested with rodent fleas or mites
Work in conditions of extreme atmospheric pressure
Work in confined space
Work in forest in endemic areas
Work in grease, oil, or tar soaked clothing
Work in indoor pool as lifeguard or swimming instructor
Work in microwave popcorn plant
Work in mite infested area in Asia
Work in mouths of patients
Work in potroom at aluminum smelter
Work in the mercury cell room in a chloralkali plant
Work in tunnel construction for years
Work or play in tick-infested area
Work or swim in contaminated water (percutaneous)
Work with flock (dryers, baggers, or cutters)
Work with glue solvents
Work with toxic chemicals that could be spilled or released
Work with vibrating hand tools
Worked for years as painter or varnisher (solvents)
Worked in foundry for years with heavy exposure
Worked in pulp and paper mill for years
Worked in smelter for years
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