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ENVIRONMENTAL and occupational diseases encompass a wide range of human illness and are important causes of disability and death in modern American society.1 , 2 They include lung cancer and mesothelioma in persons exposed to asbestos, leukemia in persons exposed to benzene, asthma and chronic bronchitis in persons exposed to organic dusts, lung cancer in persons exposed to radon, chronic disorders of the nervous system in workers exposed to solvents, kidney failure and hypertension in persons chronically exposed to lead, heart disease in persons exposed to carbon disulfide, impairment of reproductive function in persons exposed to certain solvents and pesticides, and chronic . . .
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Linda Rosenstock
University of California, Los Angeles
Kathleen M. Rest
Union of Concerned Scientists
John Benson
University of Cambridge
New England Journal of Medicine
University of Washington
Stony Brook University
Johnson University
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Rosenstock et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0926d3febbf018f815fc67 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199109263251305