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NIOSH Safety and Health Topic:

Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance (ABLES): State-Based Programs—New Jersey

Ables Home - Other States

State Contact

James D. Blando, Ph.D.
Research Scientist
New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services
Divison of Epidemiology, Environmental, and Occupational Health
PO Box 360
Trenton, NJ   08625-0360

Telephone:  (609) 777-3039
Fax:   (609) 292-5677
E-mail:  james.blando@doh.state.nj.us


General Information Telephone: (609) 984-1863


Available Publications

The following can be requested from the address above. Many are available on-line.


Visit the Occupational Health Surveillance Program home page at http://www.state.nj.us/health/eoh/survweb

  • Don't Take Lead Dust Home from Work ! / !No Lleva a Casa Polvo de Plomo!
  • El Standard OSHA Para Plomo
  • Important Information for Contractors and Workers about Lead Paint Hazards
  • Lead Exposure in General Industry (set of five fact sheets)
  • Monitoring Protocols for Inorganic Lead
  • New Jersey ABLES report 1986-1996
  • New Jersey Right to Know Hazardous Substance Fact Sheets on lead, lead acetate, lead arsenate, lead arsenite, lead azide, lead chloride, lead chromate, lead cyanide, lead dioxide, lead fluoborate, lead fluoride, lead iodide, lead nitrate, lead phosphate, lead stearate, lead subacetate, lead sulfide, lead sulphate, lead thiocyanate, tetraethyl lead, tetramethyld lead
  • "Occupational Health Surveillance Update," Special issue on Lead, April 2002
  • Organic Lead Compounds and Your Health
  • Water Tower Lead Health Hazard Alert
  • What Physicians Need to Know about Occupational Lead Exposure
  • What Workers Need to Know about Occupational Lead Exposure

New Jersey State Outline
   

 

Page last updated: November 14, 2007
Page last reviewed: January 8, 2009
Content Source: Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations & Field Studies (DSHEFS)