Title:
Provided by the Center for Disease Control's (CDC), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), this historic image depic
Description:
Provided by the Center for Disease Control's (CDC), National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), this historic image depicted a female industrial worker who was inside a West Virginia tile-making factory at her tile-fettling workstation. Fettling involves the removal of debris, and roughened protuberances from the edges of newly cast ceramic tiles, by using sandpaper or a mechanical grinder. In so doing, these workers were prone to inhaling airborne silicate particulates, which lead to the chronic pulmonary disease known as pneumoconiosis, or silicosis, or more commonly known as 'grinders' disease', characterized by the formation of nodular fibrotic changes in the lungs. Note that this woman was not wearing a filtered breathing mask, increasing her chances of contracting silicosis. The image was published in the 'Public Health Bulletin', No. 244, 1939.
Creator:
CDC/ Barbara Jenkins, NIOSH
Source:
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5
Date Added:
December 4, 2012