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Review Article
Current Concepts
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Volume 337:1524-1531 November 20, 1997 Number 21
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Building-Related Illnesses
Dick Menzies, M.D., and Jean Bourbeau, M.D.

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Over the past 30 years, a new man-made ecosystem has developed — the controlled indoor environment within the sealed exterior shells of modern office buildings. This new environment has considerable potential to affect public health because more than half the adult work force in North America and Western Europe works in offices or "office-like" nonindustrial environments.1 The indoor environment of modern office buildings may be affected by the occupants, their work activities, equipment, plants, furnishings, building materials, ventilation systems, and outdoor air pollution. In the vast majority of buildings, this complex environment is controlled by one or two technicians who . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Definitions

Specific Building-Related Illnesses

Nonspecific Building-Related Illnesses

Synthesis of Evidence Regarding Office-Building–Related Illnesses

An Approach to the Patient

Conclusions


Source Information

From the Departments of Medicine and Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Montreal Chest Institute, and the Respiratory Epidemiology Unit, McGill University — both in Montreal.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Menzies at the Respiratory Epidemiology Unit, McGill University, 1110 Pine Ave. W., Montreal, QC H3A 1A3, Canada.

References


Related Letters:

Building-Related Illnesses
Johanning E., Auger P. L., Reijula K., Kroenke K., Menzies D., Bourbeau J.
Extract | Full Text  
N Engl J Med 1998; 338:1070-1071, Apr 9, 1998. Correspondence

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