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Environmental Public Health Commons

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Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health Faculty Publications

1997

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Environmental Public Health

Triazine Herbicide Exposure And Breast Cancer Incidence: An Ecologic Study Of Kentucky Counties, Michele A. Kettles, Steven R. Browning, Timothy Scott Prince, Sanford W. Horstman Nov 1997

Triazine Herbicide Exposure And Breast Cancer Incidence: An Ecologic Study Of Kentucky Counties, Michele A. Kettles, Steven R. Browning, Timothy Scott Prince, Sanford W. Horstman

Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health Faculty Publications

The incidence of breast cancer in the United States has steadily increased for the past three decades. Exposure to excess estrogen, in both natural and synthetic forms, has been implicated as a risk factor for the development of this disease. Considerable interest has been focused on organochlorines, such as the triazine herbicides, and their possible role in the initiation or promotion of human breast cancer. To explore this relationship, an ecologic study of Kentucky counties was designed. Exposure to triazines was estimated by use of water contamination data, corn crop production, and pesticide use data. A summary index of triazine …


Use Of Rollover Protective Structures -- Iowa, Kentucky, New York, And Ohio, 1992-1997, Craig Zwerling, Leon Burmeister, S. Reynolds, Robert H. Mcknight, Steven R. Browning, Deborah Reed, John Wilkins Iii, T. Bean, L. Mitchell, Eric Hallman, John J. May, A. Stark Sep 1997

Use Of Rollover Protective Structures -- Iowa, Kentucky, New York, And Ohio, 1992-1997, Craig Zwerling, Leon Burmeister, S. Reynolds, Robert H. Mcknight, Steven R. Browning, Deborah Reed, John Wilkins Iii, T. Bean, L. Mitchell, Eric Hallman, John J. May, A. Stark

Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health Faculty Publications

Agriculture has one of the highest occupational fatality rates of all industries in the United States (1). Tractors and other types of agricultural equipment account for a large proportion of these fatalities, and farm-tractor rollovers account for approximately 130 work-related deaths each year in the United States (2). Although rollover protective structures (ROPS) are effective in protecting tractor operators from fatal injuries during rollovers (3-5), most tractors in the United States are not equipped with ROPS (4-7). Beginning in 1985, tractor manufacturers in the United Sates agreed to sell only tractors with ROPS; however, many older tractors without ROPS remain …