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Monitoring the Worker and the Community for Chemical Exposure and Disease: Legal and Ethical Considerations in the U.S.

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dc.contributor.author Ashford, Nicholas
dc.date.accessioned 2002-08-14T14:34:55Z
dc.date.available 2002-08-14T14:34:55Z
dc.date.issued 1994
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/1580
dc.description.abstract Biomonitoring of workers and communities raises important legal and ethical concerns, but the two contexts are different. Monitoring workers is usually done by, or at the instigation of, the employer who in law is responsible for their health and safety. Whenever worker monitoring leads to the removal of workers, difficult issues emerge affecting labor-management relations, labor law and discrimination law. Resulting legal and ethical questions are usually framed within the context of the employment contract or labor relationship. In contrast, public health or environmental officials may be the driving force behind biomonitoring of the community. No employer-employee relationship exists, and the doctor-patient relationship may be tenuous. The community may often initiate the request for biomonitoring, but the situation is no less contentious. On the basis of an historical view of monitoring events within the U.S. context, mechanisms are suggested that would promote positive interactions between employers and workers, and between individuals and groups in the monitoring of chemically contaminated communities. These suggestions should have relevance to experience in other countries en
dc.description.provenance Made available in DSpace on 14-Aug-2002 14:34:55 (GMT). Previous issue date: 1994-06 en
dc.description.provenance Submitted by Brian Anderson (banderso@mit.edu). DSpace accession date: 14-Aug-2002 14:34:55 (GMT) Submission has 1 bitstreams: Monitoring_ClinChm.pdf: 191428 bytes, checksum: 470b669af3cd0baed91028e46bbe148f (MD5) en
dc.format.extent 191428 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.subject Labor issues and workers' compensation en
dc.subject biomonitoring en
dc.title Monitoring the Worker and the Community for Chemical Exposure and Disease: Legal and Ethical Considerations in the U.S. en

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  • Technology and Law Program
    Research and graduate studies bring law and technology perspectives to environmental, policy, trade, and sustainability issues.

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