From:
Jessica Martin <jessica.a.martin**At_Symbol_Here**UCONN.EDU>
Subject:
Re: [DCHAS-L] Three new articles for ACS Chemical Health & Safety are available online.
Date:
Aug 29, 2022 21:50 UTC
Reply-To:
ACS Division of Chemical Health and Safety <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**Princeton.EDU>
Message-ID:
<7B64B9AC-3CAD-429C-AEB8-A18C6DD75539**At_Symbol_Here**uconn.edu>
In-Reply-To:
<BYAPR02MB56860C10E120DB8F2BDABC7A8C769**At_Symbol_Here**BYAPR02MB5686.namprd02.prod.outlook.com>
Jack,
I think that is a REALLY good idea. I think it would be fantastic if you wrote a strong counter-article to this article.
Best,
Jessica A. Martin, Ph.D.
NSF Graduate Research Fellow (2018-2021)
Joint Safety Team, Founding Member (2018-2021)
Pinkhassik Group, Department of Chemistry (2016-2021)
University of Connecticut
323-327-3974
"Anger is temporary - and often useful.
But the project is forever!
Seriously - this thing is never going to end is it?”
-I said this
*Message sent from a system outside of UConn.*
Chris,
My colleagues and I have been discussing the same thing. We plan to write a thorough analysis. Suffice to say that we do not agree with some of the methods and recommendations contained within the paper.
Sincerely,
Jack Reidy (he/him)
Research Safety Specialist, Assistant Chemical Hygiene Officer
Environmental Health & Safety
Stanford University
484 Oak Road, Stanford, CA, 94305
Tel: (650) 497-7614
I acknowledge that the land on which I live and work is the ancestral and unceded land of the
Muwekma Ohlone Tribe. As an uninvited guest on these lands, I am a beneficiary of the ongoing displacement of the Ohlone people. I pay my respects to the Native peoples, past and present.
That acryloyl chloride paper is the first one I’ve seen for the upcoming special issue on sharing incidents. I hope it’s intended to showcase the very beginning of the journey from ”blame to gain” because, after bemoaning the propensity for investigations to blame the victim and fail to identify underlying causes it seems to conclude that the incident occurred because the victim failed to wear their PPE (when none of the indicated PPE seems appropriate for protecting against inhalation of acryloyl chloride, assuming there was even any acryloyl chloride remaining in the reaction mixture when the exposure occurred)…
Chris
________________________________
Christopher M. Kolodziej, Ph.D.
Chemical Hygiene Officer
Mobile: (310) 261-8611
My working hours may not be your working hours. Please do not feel obligated to reply outside of your normal work schedule.
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ASAP (As Soon As Publishable) articles are edited and published online ahead of issue publication. |
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