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Journal Article

Citation

Wickramatillake HD. Occup. Med. 1999; 49(1): 43-45.

Affiliation

Seafarer International Research Centre for Occupational Health, University of Wales, Cardiff, UK. Wickramatillake@Cardiff.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 1999, Oxford University Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10451586

Abstract

Carbon monoxide is one of the most common toxins encountered in work settings, the gas being emitted in situations where there is incomplete combustion of carbon-containing substances. Its acute and chronic health effects have been well-documented. While identification of dangerous situations and evaluation of control measures are conducted by environmental monitoring, the body burden due to inhalation of carbon monoxide is measured by an individual's blood carboxyhaemoglobin level. Carboxyhaemoglobin level can be measured directly from a blood sample or, indirectly, by measuring the end-expired carbon monoxide level and using the charts provided to read the corresponding carboxyhaemoglobin level. As the end-expired method is not an intervention method, and is therefore easy to conduct, it is being used widely in epidemiological studies and it could also be used for individual measurements. This study presents a better statistical method for validating the end-expired method than the correlation method used and described in previous studies.


Language: en

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