Stephen Zoloth
City University of New York
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Featured researches published by Stephen Zoloth.
American Journal of Public Health | 1993
Stephen Zoloth; Steven Safyer; J Rosen; David Michaels; Phil Alcabes; E Bellin; Charles Braslow
Anergy may occur in groups at high risk for tuberculosis, compromising tuberculin skin testing. Within New York Citys correctional system, anergy prevalence was 25% among opiate users referred to detoxification programs and 3% in the general population. Correlates of anergy were recent weight loss and needle sharing. The high prevalence of anergy among opiate users compromises the utility of tuberculosis screening and suggests the need for routine chest x-rays to detect pulmonary tuberculosis in some high-risk-populations.
American Journal of Public Health | 1986
Stephen Zoloth; David Michaels; M Lacher; D Nagin; Ernest Drucker
We performed a medical audit of an asbestos disease screening program offered to New York City sheet metal workers by a corporate medical service. The screening program purported to evaluate the health status of workers exposed to asbestos in the past and present during construction and renovation of commercial buildings. Using current Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulations as a benchmark, medical records for more than 800 workers who took the examination between 1982-83 were reviewed; x-ray interpretations of the staff radiologist were compared with the interpretations of specialists in occupational lung diseases. The audit found inadequate record-keeping procedures, a lack of a comprehensive occupational history, poor notification and absence of any form of health education. Further, there was an extreme lack of concordance between the staff radiologist and the specialist readers in the interpretation of x-rays (kappa = .14 for pleural disease and .26 for asbestosis). To an increasing extent, occupational clinical services are being provided by corporate medical groups; such groups may not be familiar with occupational health problems.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1987
Ernest Drucker; Deborah Nagin; David Michaels; Margot Lacher; Stephen Zoloth
New York City sheet-metal workers have a history of significant exposure to asbestos. Prior to 1972 when the use of sprayed asbestos insulation was banned in New York City, sheet-metal workers involved in building construction were exposed as they worked adjacent to spraying operations. Subsequent to that date, exposure continued as they renovated these same buildings. In 1982 the Occupational Health Program of Montefiore Medical Center and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine initiated a multidimensional asbestos evaluation and intervention program for the sheet-metal industry and union in New York. The long-term goal of the program was to eliminate asbestos exposure through the safe, systematic removal of asbestos in New York City buildings, most likely a legislated solution. In the short term, we attempted to assess and reduce asbestos exposure in the sheet-metal trade by a series of steps consisting of: mortality and morbidity studies; a medical audit of clinical screening services provided to sheet-metal workers; a comprehensive health education program; development of safe work practices; evaluation of personal protective equipment; and investigation into and support of legislative and regulatory solutions to the problem of asbestos contamination of commercial buildings. This intervention can be seen as a case study in the practice of social medicine.
Occupational health nursing | 1982
David Michaels; Stephen Zoloth
Workplace accidents result in the disablement or death of tens of thousands of U.S. workers annually. The high cost of these workplace accidents is an immense burden to all sectors of the American society: workers, employers and the government. The National Safety Council reports that in 1980 alone 245 million work days were lost due to workplace accidents, at a total cost to the economy exceeding
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 1986
Stephen Zoloth; David Michaels; Joan Ramon Villalbi; Margot Lacher
30 billion. I Yet even these figures fail to measure the pain and suffering of workers and their families that accompany disability and premature death, figures neglected in most cost-benefit analyses. Despite the enormity of the problem, there is no question that as a result of improved working conditions occupational fatality rates have actually dropped in the post-World
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1991
David Michaels; Stephen Zoloth
Psychiatric Services | 1992
David Michaels; Stephen Zoloth; Phil Alcabes; Charles Braslow; Steven Safyer
International Journal of Epidemiology | 1991
David Michaels; Stephen Zoloth; Frank B Stern
The American review of respiratory disease | 1989
Philip Alcabes; Pamela Vossenas; Robert V. Cohen; Charles Braslow; David Michaels; Stephen Zoloth
American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1985
Stephen Zoloth; David Michaels