Publications by authors named "L Witherell"

This review seeks to assist industrial hygienists in the prevention of Legionnaires' disease caused by Legionella bacteria. Breathing water droplets contaminated with Legionella bacteria, in which the organism has been permitted to amplify, causes this disease. Possible sources of transmission include nearly all manmade building water systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Where environmental contaminants pose potential health hazards, health departments are involved in complex and often controversial situations. Often the rapid formation of a threshold exposure level is required to protect public health. A decision making process was implemented in Vermont when it became necessary to have an interim ambient air exposure level to test for tetrachloroethylene contamination in the water, air, and soil of a community.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Because evidence of mercury exposure was found among workers of a mercury thermometer-manufacturing plant in March 1984, the Vermont Department of Health studied the workers' children for both exposure to mercury and evidence of mercury toxicity. The median urine mercury level of 23 workers' children was 25 micrograms/L. This was significantly higher than the level (5 micrograms/L) among 39 children randomly selected from nonworkers' households in the same community (P less than .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Several incidents of contamination of the home with chemicals from the workplace have been reported in recent years. Employees at a mercury thermometer plant transported mercury from the factory into their homes. As a result, increased levels of mercury were found in the urine of some of the employees' families.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Legionellosis (Legionnaires' disease and Pontiac fever) outbreaks have been associated with aerosols ejected from contaminated cooling towers--wet-type heat rejection units (WTHRUs) used to dissipate unwanted heat into the atmosphere. The Vermont Department of Health undertook a program to inventory, inspect, and sample all WTHRUs in Vermont from April 1981 to April 1982. All WTHRUs were sampled for Legionella pneumophila and data were obtained for location, design, construction, and operating characteristics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF