White Paper

Why Employers Should Go Above and Beyond OSHA’s Lead Monitoring Standards

OSHA’s regulations for the treatment of lead toxicity no longer align with current clinical guidelines. To keep workers safe and reduce workers’ comp costs, employers need up-to-date occupational health expertise.
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White Paper Summary

Every year, millions of people are exposed to harmful levels of lead. The CDC estimates that more than half of Americans — at least 170 million people — were exposed to unsafe levels of lead in early childhood, demonstrating how prevalent this risk remains.

In adults, lead poisoning can cause high blood pressure, neurological issues and damage to the kidneys and reproductive systems. Symptoms may include muscle and joint pain, fatigue, headaches, stomach cramps and irritability. Lead poisoning is an even greater danger to children and pregnant women. Children may experience lasting effects on growth and development, including behavioral problems and speech impairments. Fetuses exposed to high levels of lead in the womb can also experience these effects and are at increased risk of premature birth.

For most people, lead exposure happens when the metal leaches into the water supply from old pipes, or when lead-based paint starts to flake off. But for some, lead exposure is an everyday occupational hazard.

To learn more about Concentra, please visit their website.

Concentra® is America’s leading provider of occupational health services, delivering work-related injury care, physical therapy, and workforce health services from nearly 550 Concentra medical centers and more than 150 onsite clinics at employer locations nationwide.

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