The U.K. authorities are failing to acknowledge or deal effectively with an epidemic of work-related cancers. The government’s Health and Safety Executive (HSE) underestimates the exposed population, the risks faced as a result of those exposures, and the potential for prevention. The HSE fails to acknowledge the social inequality in occupational cancer risk, which is concentrated in manual workers and lower employment grades, or the greater likelihood these groups will experience multiple exposures to work-related carcinogens. It continues to neglect the largely uninvestigated and unprioritized risk to women and currently has neither a requirement nor a strategy for reducing the numbers and volumes of cancer-causing substances, processes, ...
Background We became aware of concern about cancer at a Scottish semiconductor manufacturing facilit...
OBJECTIVES: This study provides a detailed analysis of the global and regional burden of cancer due ...
Background: Studies in other countries have generally found approximately 4% of current cancers to b...
Although only a relatively small proportion of cancer is attributable to occupational exposure to ca...
To explore and explain the significance of occupationally-related cancers in Scotland in the context...
Objectives: Work-related cancers are largely preventa¬ble. The overall aim of this project is to es...
To estimate the current occupational cancer burden due to past exposures in Britain, estimates of th...
First paragraph: While both main political parties come under pressure over how they will cut the UK...
background: Work-related cancer is an important public health issue with a large financial impact on...
occupational cancer There is a need for clear priorities to prevent major work-related health risks ...
Every year, more than 100 000 people die from the consequences of a cancer caused by exposure at wor...
OBJECTIVES: This study provides a detailed analysis of the global and regional burden of cancer due ...
First paragraph: The Scottish Government in Better Cancer Care: An Action Plan identifies returning ...
FUNDING SUPPORT This study was funded by the Wellcome Trust (collaborative grant 200368/Z/15/Z).Peer...
Objective: An excess of cancer was suspected by workers of the metallurgy department at the French...
Background We became aware of concern about cancer at a Scottish semiconductor manufacturing facilit...
OBJECTIVES: This study provides a detailed analysis of the global and regional burden of cancer due ...
Background: Studies in other countries have generally found approximately 4% of current cancers to b...
Although only a relatively small proportion of cancer is attributable to occupational exposure to ca...
To explore and explain the significance of occupationally-related cancers in Scotland in the context...
Objectives: Work-related cancers are largely preventa¬ble. The overall aim of this project is to es...
To estimate the current occupational cancer burden due to past exposures in Britain, estimates of th...
First paragraph: While both main political parties come under pressure over how they will cut the UK...
background: Work-related cancer is an important public health issue with a large financial impact on...
occupational cancer There is a need for clear priorities to prevent major work-related health risks ...
Every year, more than 100 000 people die from the consequences of a cancer caused by exposure at wor...
OBJECTIVES: This study provides a detailed analysis of the global and regional burden of cancer due ...
First paragraph: The Scottish Government in Better Cancer Care: An Action Plan identifies returning ...
FUNDING SUPPORT This study was funded by the Wellcome Trust (collaborative grant 200368/Z/15/Z).Peer...
Objective: An excess of cancer was suspected by workers of the metallurgy department at the French...
Background We became aware of concern about cancer at a Scottish semiconductor manufacturing facilit...
OBJECTIVES: This study provides a detailed analysis of the global and regional burden of cancer due ...
Background: Studies in other countries have generally found approximately 4% of current cancers to b...