ISSN 3030-3001 Open Access · Peer Reviewed
PDF
ZENODO

Keywords

pneumoconiosis, silicosis, siderosilicosis, anthracosilicosis, occupational diseases, lead, pathogenetic intoxication, silicon dioxide in silicosis

How to Cite

OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES ASSOCIATED WITH CHANGES IN THE AMOUNT OF INORGANIC LEAD. (2025). MEDICINE, PEDAGOGY AND TECHNOLOGY: THEORY AND PRACTICE, 3(2), 67-70. https://www.universalpublishings.com/index.php/mpttp/article/view/9949

Abstract

At the 124th Conference of the World Health Organization in 1964, the first list of occupational diseases was adopted, and this list included generally accepted traditional occupational diseases that develop under the influence of widespread harmful factors. In 1980, this list was revised at the 66th World Conference. Currently, 25 countries that are members of the World Health Organization have revised and ratified the specified convention. On May 22, 1990, the European Commission adopted Recommendation 90/326/EU and approved the list of occupational diseases. However, there is still no generally accepted and unified classification of occupational diseases. Each country that is a member of the World Health Organization approves its own list of occupational diseases and determines measures for their prevention and social protection of patients.

PDF
ZENODO

References

1. Mahmudova Sh.K., Iskandarova M.S. Occupational diseases. - T 1996.

2. Nuritdinov E. N. Human physiology //Tashkent, Aloqachi. – 2005. – T. 48.

3. Komilova N., Ravshanov A., Muhammedova N. Medical geography and global health //Textbook. – 2018.

4. Tojiyev M., Nig'matov H. Safety of life activities //Tashkent. Tafakkur bo'stoni. – 2012.

Indexed In · Partners

Trusted by Global Scientific Indexing Services

JUSR is indexed and recognized by leading international databases and research integrity organizations.