AIC HEALTH & SAFETY GUIDES
| The Health and Safety Committee has compiled resources related to regulatory, research, and toxicological information that we believe conservators will find useful in their work. This document includes a list of relevant books, selected because of reference information that can assist conservators as they evaluate specific workplace hazards. It also provides URLs for accessing professional and standards/reference organizations, as well as pertinent government agencies on the Internet.
The Bibliography and Technical Resource List are meant to be reference guides, helping conservators to navigate the existing literature as it pertains to health and safety hazards and general legal requirements. While every effort will be made to update these listings as needed, the Committee cannot guarantee that every address published here will be accessible or current. Our intent is to make important health and safety information accessible to the entire AIC membership, giving individual conservators the tools by which they can begin to answer some of their own health and safety questions.
--Hilary A. Kaplan, Conservator, Georgia Department of Archives and History, 330 Capitol Ave., Atlanta, GA 30334; (404) 656-3554; fax (404) 651-8471; hkaplan@sos.state.ga.us |
HEALTH AND SAFETY TECHNICAL RESOURCES FOR THE CONSERVATOR
ELECTRONIC RESOURCES
This list is intended as a starting point for conservators seeking regulatory, research, or other toxicological information relating to health and safety in the workplace. Internet access has created an ever-changing set of resources, many with multiple links to other useful sites. World Wide Web sites for organizations and agencies within this list have been included, where available. Although every effort will be made to update the Internet listings annually, we cannot guarantee that every address will be accessible, or still current, in the interim. A few excellent doorways to related sites include:
There exist many for-fee publishers of health and safety information on CD-ROM or On-line, which are not listed here to avoid the appearance of endorsement. However, one service is worth mentioning, is accessible through university or medical school libraries, and soon may expand its public domain databases: MEDLARS, TOXNET, and Grateful Med Databases, managed through the National Library of Medicine, 1-888-346-3656.
PROFESSIONAL and STANDARDS/REFERENCE ORGANIZATIONS
American Association for Laboratory Accreditation
656 Quince Orchard Road
Gaithersburg, MD 20878
(301) 670-1377
Sources of standards for accreditation and list of accredited laboratories in all scientific disciplines; reciprocal acceptance with Canada.
American Association of Occupational Health Nurses (AAOHN)
50 Lenox Pointe
Atlanta, GA
30324 609-848-1000 or 800-257-8290
Administers a national certification program, and maintains roster, for nurses specializing in the field of occupational health.
American Board of Industrial Hygiene (ABIH)
4600 W. Saginaw, Ste. 101
Lansing, MI 48917
(517) 321-2638
Establishes professional industrial hygiene certification criteria, maintains listing of Certified Industrial Hygienists (CIH), references for accredited college and graduate level degree programs in industrial hygiene.
American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine (ACOEM)
55 W. Seegers Road
Arlington Heights, IL 60005
(708) 228-6850
Locations of occupational medical clinics and clinicians; information on accreditation and training requirements; publishes Journal of Occupational Medicine; and other literature resources. See also: Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics, below.
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
6500 Glenway, Building D-7
Cincinnati, OH 45211
(513) 742-2020
Major consensus-setting organization within the field of industrial hygiene and occupational/environmental safety and health. Source of annually updated recommended exposure guidelines for wide variety of chemical and physical agents (Threshold Limit Values - TLVs). Publishes biological monitoring guidelines, reference materials, training aids.
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
11 West 42nd St., 13th Floor
New York, NY 10036
(212) 642-4915
Source of professional consensus standards often adopted into regulations. Excellent guidance in areas of respiratory protection and ventilation.
Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics
1010 Vermont Ave., NW, #513
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 347-4976
Extensive listing of U.S. clinics by state; related research projects.
American Public Health Association (APHA)
1015 Fifteenth Street NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 789-5600
Leading professional organization for all public health disciplines; includes an Occupational Health Section.
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE)
1791 Tullie Circle NE
Atlanta, GA 30329
(404) 636-8400
Publishes variety of engineering consensus standards, including widely accepted performance standards for building and laboratory ventilation, and indoor air quality.
American Society of Safety Engineers
1800 E. Oakton St.
DesPlaines, IL 60018
(847) 699-2929
Leading professional organization in the occupational safety field; publications, training aids, technical assistance.
Board of Certified Safety Professionals
208 Burwash Ave.
Savoy, IL 61874
(217) 359-9263
Establishes professional occupational safety specialist certification criteria, maintains listing of Certified Safety Professionals (CSP).
Health Physics Society
8000 Westpark Dr., Suite 130
McLean, VA 22102
(703) 790-1745
Leading professional organization in the field of radiation health physics; administers certification program and maintains list of Certified Health Physicists (CHP) .
Illuminating Engineering Society of North America
345 E. 47th St.
New York, NY 10017
(212) 705-7913
Source of consensus standards on illumination levels and devices appropriate to type of building, activity, and task.
National Council on Ergonomics
National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements
7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 800
Bethesda, MD 20814
(301) 657-2652
Professional consensus organization disseminating information on and recommendations for radiation measurement criteria and guidelines for protection.
National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)
Batterymarch Park, P.O. Box 9101
Quincy, MA 02269-9101
(800) 344-3555
Source of national fire codes and supplemental explanatory handbooks such as Flammable & Combustible Liquids Code Handbook, Fire Protection Handbook,and Fire Protection Guide on Hazardous Materials.
National Safety Council
1121 Springlake Drive
Itasca, IL 60143
(800) 621-7619
Source of training and information on safety and health issues, including publications.
Radiation Safety and Health Physics Homepage
Safety Equipment Institute (SEI)
McLean, VA
(703) 442-5732
Leading third party certifier of safety and personal protective equipment; maintains listings of items that have been tested and meet the appropriate product standards (ANSI, ASTM, NFPA, NIOSH, etc.), and the manufacturing facilities met SEI quality assurance requirements..
SPECIALIZED CONSULTING ORGANIZATIONS
Arts, Crafts, and Theater Safety (ACTS)
181 Thompson Street, No. 23
New York, NY 10012-2586
(212) 777-0062
ATTN: Monona Rossol
Health and safety data, lectures, and training related to museums and other cultural activities. Ms. Rossol serves as consultant to the AIC Health and Safety Committee.
Center for Safety in the Arts
2124 Broadway, P.O. Box 310
New York, NY 10023
ATTN.: Dr. Michael McCann, Angela Babin
Source of Data Sheet series on Museum and Conservation Health Hazards and Controls, numerous publications, consulting and training services, and Art Hazards News.
PERTINENT GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements
7910 Woodmont Avenue, Suite 800
Bethesda, MD 20814
(301) 657-2652
National Technical Information Service (NTIS)
Department of Commerce
5285 Port Royal Rd.
Springfield, VA 22161
(703) 487-4650
U.S. Dept. Of the Interior, National Park Service
Museum Management Division
P.O. Box 37127, Suite 580
Washington DC 20013-7127
(202) 343-8138
Source of: Museum Handbook, particularly useful is Part 1, "Museum Collections," and "Conserv-o-gram" series containing safety and health information and practical control recommendations.
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
200 Constitution Ave NW
Washington DC 20210
(202) 219-8148
(202) 219-8902 (on-site consultation service)
Consult website for locations of individual area offices and consultation offices; standards and standards interpretation; AOC is a detailed database on chemical hazard information, and new site on ergonomics.
Promulgates and enforces safety and health regulations for most businesses and industries in the United States. Maintains Regional and Area Offices; many states also manage their own federally-approved occupational safety and health plan. Publishes helpful booklets summarizing standards. Offers free, confidential on-site Consultation Services to small businesses and organizations.
U. S. Department of Transportation
400 Seventh Street, SW
Washington, DC 20590 (202) 366-4000
(202) 366-0656: Office of Hazardous Materials Transportation
(202) 366-4488: Transportation of Hazardous Materials Hotline
Promulgates and enforces national transportation regulations, including shipment of hazardous materials.
U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
401 M Street SW
Washington, DC 20460
(202)260-4700
Consult website for more hotlines on specific environmental topics.
Other useful site is IRIS, the EPA's database on environmental toxicity of various chemicals.
Administers laws to control/reduce pollution of air, water, and land; regulates use and labeling of pesticides. Administered primarily at state level.
National Pesticide Telecommunications Network
800-858-7378 or e-mail
A toll-free U.S. EPA-and-Oregon State University sponsored information service on a wide-variety of pesticide-related subjects, including products, poisonings and emergencies, toxicology, environmental chemistry, safety practices, clean-up and disposal, and laboratory analysis. It is open to the public and professionals. Operating hours are from 6:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Pacific Time.
U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO)
Washington, DC 20402-9325
(202) 783-3238
Source of government documents, at reasonable cost. Code of Federal Regulations (Daily Federal Registers).
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES (DHHS)
Important DHHS agencies include:
1. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
a. National Center for Environmental Health
b. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
3. National Institutes of Health
a. National Cancer Institute
b. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences - National Toxicology Program
4. National Library of Medicine
These programs are described below, and can be accessed through their individually listed websites, or through the DHHS Home Page, click on "About HHS", then [HHS Agencies on Internet].
Agency for Toxic Substance and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
1600 Clifton Road NE (E-33)
Atlanta, GA 30333
(404) 639-6204
Agency maintains health hazard databases, including environmental fate of chemical releases, pesticide profile sheets, and HazDat, the ATSDR's Hazardous Substance Release/Health Effects Database.
Centers for Disease Control
1600 Clifton Road NE
Atlanta, GA 30333
(404) 639-8063
National Center for Environmental Health Research on environmental-public health issues; access through CDC web site.
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
200 Independence Ave. SW Room 317B
Washington, DC 20210
(800) 356-4647: For technical information, publications or to request a Health Hazard Evaluation of your workplace.
(513) 533-8326: For information on health & safety databases.
(304) 291-4331: For information on respirators.
(513) 533-8241: For locations of Educational Resource Centers
Conducts research and training in occupational safety and health issues; certifies respirators; issues health hazard alerts and other publications; conducts health hazard evaluations upon employer or employee request; maintains extensive databases. Funds Educational Research Centers located at many universities across the country, providing training courses and information to employees and employers.
National Institutes of Health
9000 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD
(and other sites across the nation)
(301) 496-5583
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Research
Triangle Park, NC
(919) 541-3345
Information on adverse effects of environmental factors on human health. Administers the National Toxicology Program, and various databases.
National Cancer Institute
(301) 496-5583
National Library of Medicine
1-888-346-3656
INTERNATIONAL REGULATORY AND PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety
250 Main Street, East
Hamilton, Ontario L8N 1H6
Canada
(905) 572-4400 (Technical Assistance)
1-800-263-8276
Tripartite (government, industry, labor) organization for development and recommendation of safety and health standards for the workplace; resource organization for publications, fact sheets, training materials; information on occupational medical clinics, professional organizations, and standards throughout all provinces.
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC)
150 cours Albert Thomas, F-69372
Lyon cedex 08
France
33(0)4 72 73 84 85
Agency of the World Health Organization; publishes international consensus documents evaluating hazardous substances relative to ability to cause cancer.
International Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements
(see National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, above)
International Labour Office
4, route des Morillons
CH 1211 Geneva 22
Switzerland
41-22-799-67-40
Major international resource for research and technical assistance on issues of workplace safety and health. Edits and publishes the standard reference: Encyclopaedia of Occupational Health and Safety.
International Occupational Hygiene Association
Secretariat: British Occupational Hygiene Society
Ste. 2, Georgian House
Great Northern Road
Derby, DE1 1LT
United Kingdom
44-332-298-101
Professional organization representing industrial/occupational hygiene interests and resources world-wide; board member contacts from the following countries: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, and US.
International Safety Council
(see National Safety Council, above)
HEALTH & SAFETY COMMITTEE
SUGGESTED READINGS
SOURCES
(call for catalogues/other information)
NIOSH Publications
(800) 35-NIOSH
National Safety Council (NSC)
(708) 285-1121
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
(513) 742-2020
American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA)
(703) 849-8888
National Fire Protection Association (NFP)
(800)-344-3555
Arts, Crafts, and Theater Safety (ACT)
(212)-777-0062
Center for Safety in the Arts (CSA)
see Arts Hazards News, below
Amazon Books
A.M. Best Co (BEST)
(201)-439-2200
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
(212)-642-4900
Cole-Parmer
(800)-323-4340
Labelmaster
(800)-621-5808
Lab Safety Supply
(800)-356-0783
Nan Waters & Rogers (VWR)
(800)-234-9300 (Philadelphia)
Van Nostrand Reinhold
(800)-842-3636
U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS
An organization must first determine if it is regulated under state or federal OSHA rules. State regulated organizations should contact their state OSHA for publications and compliance materials. Those under the
federal law should have sections of the Code of Federal regulations (CFR) that apply to their work. These are 29 CFR 1900-1910 (General Industry Standards) and 29 CFR 1926 (Construction Standards). Sources for these publications are:
1. Call your local OSHA Office for obtaining copies.
2. Government Printing Office, Superintendent of Documents, P.O. Box 371954, Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954. Tel: 202-512-1800
3. Lab Safety Supply Co.
Suggested: For general OSHA compliance for small businesses:OSHA Handbook for Small Businesses, U.S. Department of Labor, 1993, OSHA No.2209 (revised). (GPO order #029-016-001-441).
GENERAL SAFETY AND FIRE PREVENTION
Best's Safety Directory
A. M. Best Co.
Comprehensive listing of suppliers & manufacturers of safety and health products, includes summaries of pertinent OSHA standards. Published yearly.
National Fire Protection Association
Obtain catalog of the 270 codes. Choose pertinent codes such as:
NFPA#909 Protection Cultural Resources.
NFPA#914 Fire Protection in Historic Structures
NFPA#30 Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code.
NFPA#101 Life Safety Code
NFPA #45 Fire Protection for Laboratories Using Chemicals
Three important codes are publlished in an expanded and annotated handbook version:
Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code Handbook, 1997 ed., NFPA
1996 National Electric Code & Handbook, NFPA
Life Safety Code Handbook, NFPA
Not a code, but an important reference: Fire Protection Handbook, 18th ed. 1997, NFPA
Accident Prevention Manual for Business and Industry, 11th ed, 3-vol set. 1996 National Safety Council
Overly detailed for most conservation practices, however it is a standard safety reference.
Vol 1 Administration & Programs. by Gary Krieger, ed, and John F. Montgomery, ed. 11th ed oct 1996
Vol 2 Engineering & Technology, 11th ed, june 1997
Environmental Management, January 1995
Security Management, Richard W. Lack, ed, june 97.
Ergonomics: A Practical Guide, 2nd Ed. 1993 National Safety Council
ANSI standards for performance of safety and protective equipment. For example, ANSI Z358.1-1990 for eye wash fountains and emergency showers or ANSI Z87.1-1989 for face and eye protection. Available from ANSI.
INDUSTRIAL HYGIENE / OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Fundamentals of Industrial Hygiene, 4th ed
National Safety Council publication
Barbara Plog, ed, june 1996
Good basic reference on occupational health hazards, detection, and control.
Respiratory Protection: A Manual and Guideline, 2nd ed.
1991 AIHA Respiratory Protection Committee
Complete overview of all levels of respiratory protection devices and program elements.
Noise & Hearing Conservation Manual, 4th Ed.
1986 AIHA Noise Committee
Basic reference on theory of noise sources, monitoring, and control; establishing hearing
conservation program; selecting hearing protection.
Patty's Industrial Hygiene and Toxicology, 4th Ed.
3-vol. Set Clayton & Clayton, ed.
John Wiley & sons.
Prohibitively expensive for conservators ($1800), it is nevertheless a definitive reference source.
Each vol in several parts, 10 total parts.
Casarett & Doull's Toxicology, 5th ed
1995 C. D. Klaassen, ed.
McGraw-Hill
General principles of toxicology of poisons, toxic substances and environmental polutants.
NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards
GPO, 1990 Spiral bound paperback
Reprint version by Diane Pub Co, 1993
Handy affordable guide to the properties, hazards, and remediation of 600 oft he more common chemical substances. Also on disk from ACGIH , publication 9340W.
ACGIH Threshold Limit Values and Biological Exposure Indices
1997, ACGIH.
Primary source for TLVs. Revised every year, based on the values and indices recommended by the major consensus-setting professional industrial hygiene organization.
Encyclopaedia of Occupational Health and Safety, 4th revised edition, 4 volumes, McGraw Hill, International Labour Organization. In press. Covers all aspects of occupational health including art and conservation. Projected publication at the end of 1997.
Chemical Hazards of the Workplace, 4th Ed.
Proctor & Hughes, 1996, VNR.
Classic reference for over 540 substances.
Occupational Medicine, 3rd Ed.
1994, Zenz, Dickerson, Horvath Eds.
Mosby-Year Book
Classic reference.
First Aid Manual for Chemical Accidents, 2nd ed.
M. Lefevre, 1989, Van Nostrand Reinhold
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS REFERENCES
Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary, 13th ed.,
1997, revised by Sax, N. Irving and Lewis, Sr. Richard, Van Nostrand-Reinhold Co.
Brief description, properties, hazards, and uses of chemicals. Basic reference, applicable to every lab.
Colour Index International, 3rd ed,
1971-1992 in 9 vols. From Society of Dyers and Colourists, POB 244 Perkin House, 82 Grattan Rd, Bradford, BD1 2JB, England, ph 44 (0) 1274 725138, fax 44 (0) 1274 392888. CDROM version is 450 GBP + VAT. Inquire for hardcopy price. Or email for information.
Merck Index, 12th ed.
1996, Susan Budavari, et al, ed, Merck & Co. pubs
Book and cd available, Chapman & Hall, pubs
Description, properties, structure, derivation of more than 10,000 chemicals, drugs, and biological substances. Basic reference, more applicable to larger labs.
Dangerous Properties of Industrial Materials, 9th edition,
Sax, N.I.and R.J. Lewis, Sr. , jan 1996. Van Nostrand-Reinhold Co., 3-vol. set.
Excellent source of information on chemical descriptions, hazards, standards, etc. Labs
should at least identify an accessible library which has this expensive reference.
Hazardous Substance Fact Sheets, New Jersey Department of Health, CN 368, Trenton, N.J. 08625-0368. Tel: 609-984-2202. Excellent fact sheets on several hundred individual chemicals which list hazards, physical constants, regulatory requirements and odor thresholds when known.
The MSDS Pocket Dictionary, Genium Publishing Corporation, Schenectady. Revised, 1994. A dictionary of terms used on Material Safety Data Sheets. They also have other little handbooks and booklets in Spanish. For a publication list contact Genium Publishing at 1146 Catalyn Street, Schenectady, N.Y. 12303-1836. Tel: (518)-377-8854.
Hazardous Chemicals Desk Reference, 4th edition
R. Lewis
1996 Van Nostrand Reinhold
Based on Sax. 6000 substances, 900 new to this ed. Affordable; a must.
LABORATORY SAFETY
Prudent Practices in the Laboratory: Handling and Disposal of Chemicals
1995, National Research Council, National Academy Press
Completely revised and merged edition of the excellent "Prudent Practices" series on Handling Hazardous Chemicals in Labs and Disposal of Chemicals from Laboratories.
CRC Handbook of Laboratory Safety, 4th Ed.
A. Keith Furr,ed, 1995
The definitive reference for all laboratories.
Destruction of Hazardous Chemicals in the Laboratory
G. Lunn, 1994, John Wiley and Sons
Safe Storage of Laboratory Chemicals, 2nd ed.
1991, D. Pipitone , John Wiley and Sons ,
For labs with a larger variety of incompatible chemicals.
Bretherick's Handbook of Reactive Chemical Hazards, an indexed guide to published data. 5th Ed.
1995, 2 vol set, Butterworth-Heinemann
4600 main entries, especially concerns explosive or flammable interactions.
Guidelines for Laboratory Design: Health and Safety Considerations, 2nd. Ed.
1993, Louis DiBerardinis, et al, John Wiley & sons
Important design guidelines.
Laboratory Fume Hoods: A User's Manual
1993 , Thomas Saunders, John Wiley & Sons
A true user's manual of trouble shooting, repair, and safe use.
PESTICIDES & FUMIGANTS
Handbook of Pesticide Toxicology
1991, Hayes, W.J., Jr., and E.R. Laws, Jr. (eds.), 3 volumes, Academic Press.
Covers general principles of pesticide toxicology, effects of pesticide classes, and data on 256 compounds that have documented human effects.
Pesticide Users' Health and Safety Handbook: An International Guide
Watterson, A., 1989, Van Nostrand Reinhold.
(out of print.)
Linnie, M.J. 1990. "Conservation: Pest Control in Museums - The Use of Chemicals and Associated Health Problems", International Journal of Museum Management and Curatorship, Vol 9. pp. 419 - 433. Provides an overview to many of the chemicals currently used in museums and their documented health effects.
Rossol, M. and W.C. Jessup 1996. "No Magic Bullets: Ethical Considerations for Pest Management Strategies", International Journal of Museum Management and Curatorship, Vol. 15. No. 2, pp. 145-168. This paper provides a cohesive and authoritative understanding of the ethical, legal, and regulatory aspects of pest management which must be considered when selecting treatments. Many biocides used in museums have been categorized by chemical class. Also included are some of the hazards associated with their use, the OSHA rules which must be followed, and the guarantees and assurances which should be written into contracts with commercial pest control operators.
ART / CONSERVATION HAZARDS
ACTS FACTS, Arts, Crafts, and Theater Safety, New York.
A monthly newsletter updating health and safety regulations and research affecting the arts. Available from ACTS, Attn: M. Rossol, 181 Thompson Street, #23, New York, New York 10012. $15/year for 12 issues.
Arts Hazards News , Center for Safety in the Arts, New York.
A newsletter covering various topics related to health and safety in the arts. Each year they publish a "Special Resources Issue" which lists occupational clinics, OSHA offices and other agencies. Available from CSA, 5 Beekman Street, I0th floor. New York, New York 10038, no phone access. $24/year for 4 issues.
The Artists Complete Health and Safety Guide, 2nd Ed.
1994, Monona Rossol, Allworth Press, New York
A guide to safety and OSHA compliance for those using paints, pigments, dyes, metals, solvents, and other art and craft materials. Affordable, basic reference for conservators and artists.
Artist Beware, 2nd ed
1993, M. McCann, Lyons and Burford,
Affordable, basic reference for conservators and artists.
Safety in Museums and Galleries
Howie, F.M. (Ed.) 1987
Butterworth and Co., Ltd. London
Although out-of-print, this reference has useful information on hazards and precautions. While
many of the chapters relate specifically to safety and health programs established under British
laws for British museums, the general discussions of the variety of the hazards associated with
museum work are useful for museums all over the world.
Fenn, J. 1987. "Danger in the Discovery Room", Museum Quarterly: The Journal of the Ontario Museums Association, Vol. 16, No. 2, Summer. pp. 8 -11, 26.
Overexposure: Health Hazards in Photography, 2nd ed.
1991, Susan D. Shaw and Monona Rossol, Allworth Press
Essential for those working with photo chemicals.
WORKPLACE CONTROLS
Ventilation: A Practical Guide
1995 Clark, Cutter, and McGrane, Lyons and Burford, NY
An excellent guide to basic ventilation principles and step-by-step guidance for those who
wish to evaluate, design, and build and adequate ventilation system.
ACGIH Industrial Ventilation: A Manual of Recommended Practice, 22nd. Ed.
1995, ACGIH
The definitive design source for ventilation systems; updated regularly, should be referenced in contract specifications for ventilation upgrades and installations.
Ventilation for Control of the Work Environment
Wm Burgess et al, 1989, John Wiley & Sons
Companion book to Industrial Ventilation; details on design principles and performance testing.
Quick Selection Guide to Chemical Protective Clothing, 3rd. Ed.
1997, Forsberg & Mansdorf , Van Nostrand Reinhold.
Excellent pocket-size reference of 15 common glove and suit materials and their suitability with 600 chemicals; details on breakthrough times and permeation rates.
ACGIH Guidelines for Selection of Chemical and Protective Clothing, 3rd Ed.
1987, Schwope, et al, ACGIH, 2 vol set
Detailed data on selection criteria.
American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-conditioning Engineers' ASHRAE 62-1989 "Ventilation for Acceptable Air Quality." Can be obtained from ASHRAE, 1791 Tullie Circle. N.E., Atlanta, Georgia 30329. Tel: (404)-636-8400.
Consesus standards for indoor air quality.
The Committee expresses its appreciation to Monona Rossol and Wendy C. Jessup for contributing many invaluable annotated listings. For a more extensive bibliography on Integrated Pest Management, and pesticide hazards, contact Ms. Rossol (Arts, Crafts, and Theatre Safety,
212-777-0062) or Ms. Jessup (Wendy Jessup and Associates, Inc.; 703-532-0788).
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