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Ten years ago a friend and colleague observed that the field of occupational medicine was then at the same stage of sophistication as internal medicine in the 1920s. The problems we were encountering in occupational medicine had very little precedent. The literature relating to the field was terribly thin. In particular, there was no definitive, readable textbook of occupational medicine analogous to Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1994) or the CecilLoeb Textbook of Medicine (Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1971) for internal medicine. That, at least, is no longer the case.
Rosenstock and Cullen have compiled just such a
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