A Method for Evaluating the Mean Exposure from a Lognormal Distribution
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Aihaj Journal
- Vol. 48 (4), 374-379
- https://doi.org/10.1080/15298668791384896
Abstract
OSHA's risk assessments, made in support of new standards, implicitly assume that workers are exposed at the level of the PEL on the average over their working lifetimes. This approach seems to be justified at least in cases where the toxicant is eliminated slowly from the critical site in the body. Thus, there are situations where the industrial hygienist should seek to evaluate worker mean exposure over time. A simple testing procedure is proposed for determining whether the mean exposure of a lognormally-distributed exposure series, μc, is less than the Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) at desired levels of significance and power. With the assumption that the exposures are described adequately by a longnormal distribution, the method allows realistic exposure scenarios where μcc and the level of variability. Application of the methods to three industrial data sets indicates that the approach is viable.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Note on the Assessment of Exposure Using One-Sided Tolerance LimitsAihaj Journal, 1987
- SMOOTHING OF EXPOSURE VARIABILITY AT THE RECEPTOR: IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH STANDARDSAnnals of Occupational Hygiene, 1985
- Assessment of occupational exposure using one-sided tolerance limitsAihaj Journal, 1982
- A Comparison Between OSHA-Compliance Criteria and action-level decision criteriaAihaj Journal, 1982
- Evaluation of the time weighted average of air contaminants with special references to concentration fluctuation and biological half timeAihaj Journal, 1980
- Personnel monitoring for tetraalkyl lead in the workplaceAihaj Journal, 1979