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Environmental Research - vol. 101 n° 2 -

Environmental Research

"A number of researchers have pointed out that less is known about occupational determinants of health in women than in men. The authors examine inventories of ongoing Canadian research and of recent scientific publications in order to identify trends in the approaches used to study women's occupational health (WOH). We also consider conceptual issues in the treatment of the sex and gender of subjects. We observe that women have been the subject of relatively few investigations of occupational health in the natural or biomedical sciences and that studies of WOH have concentrated on the health care professions and on psychosocial stressors, with a deficit in toxicological and physiological studies. We use recent studies of mercury exposure in chloralkali process plants and of musculoskeletal disorders among office workers to provide specific examples of problems in conceptualizing WOH. We propose that WOH be studied more often, especially by researchers in the natural and biomedical sciences, and that such studies include both women and men, where possible, and consider the complex relationships of gender and sex to the pathways involved. More interdisciplinary research would facilitate this process, since social researchers have tended to focus more on gender/sex issues. Our findings demonstrate that it is necessary to explore the implications of using sex routinely as an explanatory variable in occupational health research and to increase emphasis on the mechanisms involved in any sex or gender differences sought or found. From an equity perspective, it is also important to situate biological sex differences so as to prevent them from being used erroneously to justify job segregation or inequitable health promotion measures."
"A number of researchers have pointed out that less is known about occupational determinants of health in women than in men. The authors examine inventories of ongoing Canadian research and of recent scientific publications in order to identify trends in the approaches used to study women's occupational health (WOH). We also consider conceptual issues in the treatment of the sex and gender of subjects. We observe that women have been the subject ...

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Work, Employment and Society - vol. 26 n° 6 -

Work, Employment and Society

"Drawing on an ethnographic study of an empirically neglected sector and setting of employment, namely sales-service work in sex shops located in London's Soho, this article develops the sociological analysis of sales-service work in two ways. First, it emphasizes the inter-relationship between emotion, aesthetics and sexuality underpinning the performance of sexualized labour, shaping the way in which the latter is enacted and embodied. Second, it highlights the importance of locating, or placing sexualized labour, teasing out the ways in which it is encoded and embedded in the particular place in which it is performed, a theme that remains under-developed in the study of sales-service work to date."
"Drawing on an ethnographic study of an empirically neglected sector and setting of employment, namely sales-service work in sex shops located in London's Soho, this article develops the sociological analysis of sales-service work in two ways. First, it emphasizes the inter-relationship between emotion, aesthetics and sexuality underpinning the performance of sexualized labour, shaping the way in which the latter is enacted and embodied. Second, ...

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"One recent finding about the prostitution market is the differences in the extent
and nature of violence experienced between women who work on the street and
those who work from indoor sex work venues.This paper brings together extensive
qualitative fieldwork from two cities in the UK to unpack the intricacies in relation
to violence and safety for indoor workers. Firstly, we document the types of
violence women experience in indoor venues noting how the vulnerabilities surrounding work-based hazards are dependent on the environment in which sex is sold. Secondly, we highlight the protection strategies that indoor workers and management develop to maintain safety and order in the establishment. Thirdly, we use these empirical findings to suggest that violence should be a high priority on the policy agenda. Here we contend that the organizational and cultural conditions that seem to offer some protection from violence in indoor settings could be useful for informing the management of street sex work. Finally, drawing on the crime prevention literature,we argue that it is possible to go a considerable way to designing out vulnerability in sex work, but not only through physical and organizational
change but building in respect for sex workers rights by developing policies that promote the employment/human rights and citizenship for sex workers. This argument is made in light of the Coordinated Prostitution Strategy."
"One recent finding about the prostitution market is the differences in the extent
and nature of violence experienced between women who work on the street and
those who work from indoor sex work venues.This paper brings together extensive
qualitative fieldwork from two cities in the UK to unpack the intricacies in relation
to violence and safety for indoor workers. Firstly, we document the types of
violence women experience in indoor venues ...

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International Journal of Epidemiology - n° 32 -

International Journal of Epidemiology

"Open up any biomedical or public health journal prior to the 1970s, and one term will be glaringly absent: gender. Open up any recent biomedical or public health journal, and two terms will be used either: (1) interchangeably, or (2) as distinct constructs: gender and sex. Why the change? Why the confusion? and why does it matter? After briefly reviewing conceptual debates leading to distinctions between ‘sex' and ‘gender' as biological and social constructs, respectively, the paper draws on ecosocial theory to present 12 case examples in which gender relations and sex-linked biology are singly, neither, or both relevant as independent or synergistic determinants of the selected outcomes. Spanning from birth defects to mortality, these outcomes include: chromosomal disorders, infectious and non-infectious disease, occupational and environmental disease, trauma, pregnancy, menopause, and access to health services. As these examples highlight, not only can gender relations influence expression -and interpretation -of biological traits, but also sex-linked biological characteristics can, in some cases, contribute to or amplify gender differentials in health. Because our science will only be as clear and error-free as our thinking, greater precision about whether and when gender relations, sex-linked biology, both, or neither matter for health is warranted. "
"Open up any biomedical or public health journal prior to the 1970s, and one term will be glaringly absent: gender. Open up any recent biomedical or public health journal, and two terms will be used either: (1) interchangeably, or (2) as distinct constructs: gender and sex. Why the change? Why the confusion? and why does it matter? After briefly reviewing conceptual debates leading to distinctions between ‘sex' and ‘gender' as biological and ...

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Mutation Research. Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis - n° 428 -

Mutation Research. Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis

"Human monitoring fits this notion and monitoring after exposure to genotoxic agents is now an established discipline. It is possible in many situations to identify humans exposed to potentially toxic materials in the workplace and the environment. Responses are often measured in peripheral lymphocytes because these cells can be acquired by a generally socially and ethically acceptable, minimally invasive route. In the early 1960s, chromosome damage in these cells was one of the first endpoints to be used as a biomarker and benzene was one of the first chemicals investigated. Although a causal relationship between chromosome damage and cancer has not been proven, it has been suggested to have some prognostic significance for future cancer onset. With other genetic biomarkers this is as yet not the case, but there are now many biomarkers for different areas of toxicology. Other well-established genetic biomarkers include the detection of hprt mutations, micronuclei and sister chromatid exchanges. However, for interpretation of responses, the issue of confounding factors must be addressed. As in most human studies, there tends to be a high degree of interindividual variability in response to chemical insults. Some non-exposed control individuals exhibit as high a level of damage as some exposed individuals and some of these have levels of damage as low as many of the controls. Thus, it is only the mean values of the groups that can substantiate an exposure related-problem; the data on an individual basis are still of limited use. While human lymphocytes remain the most popular cell type for monitoring purposes, sperm, buccal, nasal, epithelial and placental cells are also used. Confounding factors affect responses in all cell types. There are endogenous confounding factors such as age, sex, genetic make-up and exogenous confounding factors including lifestyle habits such as smoking, drinking, etc. There are biomarkers of exposure, effect and susceptibility and the last may be influenced by the genotype and polymorphism genes existing in a population. From our own studies, confounding effects will be considered in relation to workers exposed to vinyl chloride and petroleum emissions. The relationship between the biomarkers and various factors which influence them is complex. Sometimes the variables are not completely independent of one another."
"Human monitoring fits this notion and monitoring after exposure to genotoxic agents is now an established discipline. It is possible in many situations to identify humans exposed to potentially toxic materials in the workplace and the environment. Responses are often measured in peripheral lymphocytes because these cells can be acquired by a generally socially and ethically acceptable, minimally invasive route. In the early 1960s, chromosome ...

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Social Science and Medicine - vol. 46 n° 2 - 15-38649

Social Science and Medicine

"In a recent 37-nation survey of 2903 geneticists and genetic counselors, 29% would perform prenatal diagnosis (PND) for a couple with four girls who want a boy and would abort a female fetus. An additional 20% would offer a referral. The percentage who would perform PND in the United States (34%) was exceeded only by Israel (68%), Cuba (62%), Peru (39%), and Mexico (38%). In all, 47% had had requests for sex selection. There appears to be a trend toward honoring such requests since a similar survey in 1985. This paper discusses reasons for this trend and the ethical dilemmas of refusing patient requests in societies where individual autonomy is stressed."
"In a recent 37-nation survey of 2903 geneticists and genetic counselors, 29% would perform prenatal diagnosis (PND) for a couple with four girls who want a boy and would abort a female fetus. An additional 20% would offer a referral. The percentage who would perform PND in the United States (34%) was exceeded only by Israel (68%), Cuba (62%), Peru (39%), and Mexico (38%). In all, 47% had had requests for sex selection. There appears to be a ...

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Gaceta Sanitaria - vol. 13 n° 3 -

Gaceta Sanitaria

"El riesgo de mal estado de salud asociado a la sobrecarga representada por el trabajo doméstico en las mujeres con un trabajo remunerado apunta la necesidad de aumentar los recursos comunitarios para el cuidado de los niños, así como de incrementar la participación de los hombres en las tareas domésticas. Futuras encuestas de salud deberían incluir información sobre el número de personas de diferentes grupos de edad que viven en el hogar sobre todo en edades extremas."
"El riesgo de mal estado de salud asociado a la sobrecarga representada por el trabajo doméstico en las mujeres con un trabajo remunerado apunta la necesidad de aumentar los recursos comunitarios para el cuidado de los niños, así como de incrementar la participación de los hombres en las tareas domésticas. Futuras encuestas de salud deberían incluir información sobre el número de personas de diferentes grupos de edad que viven en el hogar sobre ...

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Theory and society. Renewal and Critique in Social Theory - vol. 4 n° 3 -

Theory and society. Renewal and Critique in Social Theory men ; sex ; social structure ; sociology ; women

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