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Carol Ann Epling
Assistant Professor in Family Medicine and Community Health
Journal ArticleJ Am Board Fam Med · 2021
The Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic forced not only rapid changes in how clinical care and educational programs are delivered but also challenged academic medical centers (AMCs) like never before. The pandemic made clear the need to have coord ...
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Journal ArticleMMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep · November 20, 2020
On university campuses and in similar congregate environments, surveillance testing of asymptomatic persons is a critical strategy (1,2) for preventing transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). All students at D ...
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Journal ArticleInfect Control Hosp Epidemiol · May 2016
OBJECTIVE: To explore whether surgical teams with greater stability among their members (ie, members have worked together more in the past) experience lower rates of sharps-related percutaneous blood and body fluid exposures (BBFE) during surgical procedur ...
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Journal ArticleInfect Control Hosp Epidemiol · January 2016
OBJECTIVE To use a unique multicomponent administrative data set assembled at a large academic teaching hospital to examine the risk of percutaneous blood and body fluid (BBF) exposures occurring in operating rooms. DESIGN A 10-year retrospective cohort de ...
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Journal ArticleJ Occup Environ Med · November 2015
OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the impacts of a long-standing workplace health promotion (HP) program on health care utilization and costs and estimated return on investment (ROI). METHODS: Analyses used a retrospective, observational cohort design based ...
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Journal ArticleInt J Occup Environ Health · 2011
We sought to describe risk factors for latex glove allergy symptoms among health care workers by combining data from an active clinical surveillance program and a comprehensive occupational health surveillance system. A total of 4,584 employers completed a ...
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Journal ArticleInfect Control Hosp Epidemiol · December 2008
OBJECTIVE: The risk of percutaneous blood and body fluid (BBF) exposures in operating rooms was analyzed with regard to various properties of surgical procedures. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. SETTING: A single university hospital. METHODS: All surgi ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Ind Med · January 2008
BACKGROUND: We evaluated musculoskeletal problems among women employed in poultry processing in rural northeastern North Carolina. Poultry processing is the largest single employer of women in this economically depressed region with a black majority popula ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Ind Med · May 2007
BACKGROUND: Poultry processing is characterized by rapid line speed and extreme division of labor. Morbidity associated with this work has been reported by scientists, journalists and workers in this fast growing industry. METHODS: Cross-sectional data fro ...
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Journal ArticleNew Solut · 2007
In 1989, North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) inspectors cited two poultry processing plants in northeastern North Carolina for serious repetitive motion problems. In 1990, investigators from the National Institute for Occupa ...
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Journal ArticleInt J Law Psychiatry · 2007
We report on the prevalence of self-reported depressive symptoms and associated factors among women employed in a poultry processing plant and a community comparison group of other employed women in northeastern North Carolina in the southern United States ...
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Journal ArticleEnviron Health Perspect · December 2005
We describe an ongoing collaboration that developed as academic investigators responded to a specific request from community members to document health effects on black women of employment in poultry-processing plants in rural North Carolina. Primary outco ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Ind Med · December 2004
BACKGROUND: Health care workers (HCWs) are at risk of exposures to human blood and body fluids (BBF). Needlestick injuries and splashes place HCWs at risk for numerous blood-borne infections including human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B (HBV), ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Ind Med · June 2004
BACKGROUND: Workers in the health care industry may be exposed to a variety of work-related stressors including infectious, chemical, and physical agents; ergonomic hazards; psychological hazards; and workplace violence. Many of these hazards lack surveill ...
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Journal ArticleAppl Occup Environ Hyg · May 2003
Pneumatic nail guns greatly increase worker productivity and are extensively used in wood frame building construction, with especially high use in residential construction. One surveillance report of nail gun injuries in Washington State has been published ...
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Journal ArticleArch Environ Health · 2002
Clinical findings for 38 community residents who complained of symptoms they attributed to exposure to air emissions from nearby fiber processing and polyurethane foam manufacturing facilities are reported. Common complaints included headache, mucosal irri ...
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Journal ArticlePrim Care · December 2000
This article provides an overview of occupational upper respiratory problems which are commonly encountered in a primary care setting and have received formal study. Emphasis is placed on diagnostic methods. The importance of recognizing occupational upper ...
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Journal ArticleAm J Ind Med · August 1995
Construction workers building Denver International Airport (DIA) reported work-related respiratory and flulike symptoms of several months duration. We performed a cross-sectional interview study of 495 randomly selected DIA workers from six contractors in ...
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