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Ann. occup. Hyg., Vol. 46, No. 1, pp. 3-4, 2002
© 2002 British Occupational Hygiene Society
Published by Oxford University Press
Seeing is Believing
Programme for Research on Development Processes, National Institute for Working Life, SE-112 79 Stockholm, Sweden
Received 7 August 2001; in final form 28 September 2001.
One of the themes for discussion at the IOHA Bergen Conference in June will be the use of exposure visualization in occupational hygiene. Recent applications of research in the last 15 years may well result in this approach becoming a major method of exposure control in the workplace.
The identification and measurement of hazardous exposures have always been, and must continue to be, a primary objective, but of equal importance is the discovery of effective methods of control by which risks can be minimized or eliminated. Most hygienists are all too aware of the large gap between what
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