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Title: Analysis of 541 cases of occupational acute chemical injuries in a large petrochemical company in China.

Authors: Xia, Z L; Jin, S X; Zhou, Y L; Zhu, J L; Jin, F S; Hu, D L; Fu, H; Jin, T Y; Christiani, D C

Published In Int J Occup Environ Health, (1999 Oct-Dec)

Abstract: The authors carried out a descriptive analysis of acute chemical intoxication in a large petrochemical corporation with 38,000 employees, located in a suburban district of Shanghai, China, to determine the chemicals involved and the primary causes of the incidents. Between 1977 and 1997, 350 cases of acute chemical-intoxication were recorded, resulting in a total of 541 workers with symptoms. Of these, 483 were male and 58, female, with over half the victims under 30 years old. Two hundred and seventy-five cases were serious enough to necessitate hospital admission. There were 266 cases of chemical irritation or inhalation responses (49.2%), 215 cases of mild chemical poisoning (39.7%), 31 cases of moderate poisoning (5.7%), and 29 cases resulting in critical injury (5.4%), including eight deaths (1.5%). The main causes of injury reported by patients were lack of training about safety (63%) and equipment failure (23%). The chemicals involved were asphyxiating gases (302 cases; 55.8%), irritating gases (111 cases; 20.5%), and other toxins. Intervention strategies for the prevention of acute chemical exposures were suggested to the corporation.

PubMed ID: 10633242 Exiting the NIEHS site

MeSH Terms: No MeSH terms associated with this publication

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