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Journal Article

Citation

Dew K. Int. J. Health Serv. 2002; 32(1): 163-178.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health, Wellington School of Medicine, Wellington South, New Zealand.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11913855

Abstract

This article explores the process of seeking compensation for occupational illness under a no-fault accident insurance scheme. The author uses two case studies--firefighters who attended a fire at a chemical storage depot and timbermill workers who worked with pentachlorophenol--to illustrate how science can be used to deny compensation to sick and dying workers. The results of the studies suggest that a no-fault accident compensation scheme, considered to be a victory for workers, offers no guarantee of just outcomes for working people. And science can be co-opted and used to support business and state interests against workers; this ideological support is increasingly hidden behind the development of "objective" systems of assessing compensation claims.


Language: en

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