Alice Hamilton Birthday Commemoration 1994 by Joe Dear, OSHA  @markdcatlin
Alice Hamilton Birthday Commemoration 1994 by Joe Dear, OSHA  @markdcatlin
markdcatlin | Alice Hamilton Birthday Commemoration 1994 by Joe Dear, OSHA @markdcatlin | Uploaded January 2013 | Updated October 2024, 4 hours ago.
This address is from the 125th birthday commemoration by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and the Women's Bureau, both agencies of the US Department of Labor. Joseph Dear was Assistant Secretary for OSHA under President Clinton from 1993 to 1997. Dear was the former Director of Washington State's Department of Labor and Industry.
Alice Hamilton, M.D., was the first American physician to devote her life to the practice of industrial medicine. Born into a prominent family of Fort Wayne, Indiana, she graduated from medical school at the University of Michigan in 1893. She later moved into Jane Addams' Hull House. Seeing the problems of poor working class families at close range, her compassion and professional interest were inexorably drawn to the many victims of work-related diseases and injuries. She pioneered occupational epidemiology and industrial hygiene in the United States beginning with investigations of lead poisoning among enamellers of bathtubs. Her findings were so scientifically persuasive, that they caused sweeping reforms, both voluntary and regulatory, to reduce occupational exposure to lead. In 1919, Dr. Hamilton was appointed assistant professor of industrial medicine at Harvard Medical School, becoming the first woman on the faculty of Harvard University. A statue of Alice Hamilton sits in Headwaters Park near downtown Fort Wayne, Indiana. ( hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=16956 ). For more on Dr. Hamilton's life and work, see the NIOSH website at cdc.gov/niosh/awards/hamilton/hamhist.html . Her autobiography, Exploring The Dangerous Trades was published in 1943 and is available for reading and downloading from the Internet Archive at archive.org/details/exploringthedang011737mbp . The U.S. Department of Labor Women's Bureau, established by Congress in 1920, is the only federal agency mandated to represent the needs of wage-earning women in the public policy process. For more on the past and current work of this valuable part of the US Department of Labor, visit their website at dol.gov/wb/welcome.html . With the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, Congress created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to assure safe and healthful working conditions for working men and women by setting and enforcing standards and by providing training, outreach, education and assistance. Visit OSHA's award winning website at osha.gov .
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Alice Hamilton Birthday Commemoration 1994 by Joe Dear, OSHA @markdcatlin

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