
@article{ref1,
title="Correction: Acute occupational exposures reported to the Dutch Poisons Information Center: a prospective study on the root causes of incidents at the workplace",
journal="Journal of occupational medicine and toxicology",
year="2024",
author="Wijnands, Anja P. G. and de Vries, Irma and Verbruggen, Tim and Carlier, Maxim P. and de Lange, Dylan W. and Rietjens, Saskia J.",
volume="19",
number="1",
pages="e5-e5",
abstract="Correction: J Occup Med Toxicol 17, 19 (2022)  https://doi.org/10.1186/s12995-022-00360-4  In the original version of this article [1], inhalation was mentioned as the most common route of occupational exposure (62%), followed by ocular (40%) and dermal contact (33%). Due to a calculation error, the percentage for inhalation was incorrect. The correct percentage is 34%, i.e. in 34% of patients, occupational exposure occurred via inhalation.   Because of this error, the text of the abstract, results (exposure characteristics) and discussion, should be amended as follows:  Abstract: Patients were often exposed via multiple routes (ocular contact 40%, inhalation 34% and dermal contact 33%).   Results: Patients were often exposed via multiple routes, most commonly involving ocular contact (40.0%), followed by inhalation (33.9%), dermal contact (32.6%) and oral exposures (9.4%).   Discussion: Patients were often exposed via multiple routes (ocular contact 40%, inhalation 34% and dermal contact 33%). A comparable exposure pattern was found in a previous Poison Control Center (PCC) study [7].   The original article has been corrected.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1745-6673",
doi="10.1186/s12995-024-00404-x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12995-024-00404-x"
}