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NIOSH Mobile Pocket Guide

Published in academic literature

For:Clinicians & Healthcare ProfessionalsIndustry Professionals

App Summary

The NIOSH Mobile Pocket Guide provides industrial hygiene professionals, employers, and workers with a searchable database of 677 chemicals to help recognize and control occupational hazards in the workplace. The associated research highlights the app's foundation in the NIOSH Pocket Guide, a trusted resource containing key data such as occupational exposure limits, chemical-physical properties, and symptoms of exposure. By making this critical safety information easily accessible, the authors note the tool can support the recognition and control of occupational chemical hazards.

App Screenshots

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Detailed Description

Functionality & Mechanism The NIOSH Mobile Pocket Guide, developed by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), functions as a rapid mobile reference for occupational chemical hazards. The system provides access to a database of 677 chemicals and substance groupings. The interface facilitates searches by chemical name, synonym, DOT number, CAS number, or RTECS number. The platform presents abbreviated tabular data and allows customization of displayed information, bookmarking of frequently referenced chemicals, and review of search history.

Evidence & Research Context

  • The app's content is directly based on the NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards, a standard reference in industrial hygiene.
  • The underlying dataset integrates NIOSH Recommended Exposure Limits (RELs) and OSHA Permissible Exposure Limits (PELs).
  • Data points for each substance include chemical-physical properties, symptoms of exposure, and values for short-term and immediately dangerous to life or health (IDLH) limits.
  • Associated research demonstrates the utility of the NPG dataset for data exploration and analysis by industrial hygienists and occupational health researchers.

Intended Use & Scope This application is designed for industrial hygienists, workers, employers, and occupational health professionals as a source of general hazard information. Its primary utility is to facilitate the recognition and control of workplace chemical hazards. The tool does not perform risk assessments or replace the need for professional consultation and a comprehensive site-specific safety program.

Studies & Publications

1 publication

Peer-reviewed research associated with this app.

Development/Design Paper

Visualizing the NIOSH Pocket Guide: Open-source web application for accessing and exploring the NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards

Lucas et al. (2023) · Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene

Describes the research-driven development of this app
The NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards is a trusted resource that displays key information for a collection of chemicals commonly encountered in the workplace. Entries contain chemical structures—occupational exposure limit information ranging from limits based on full-shift time-weighted averages to acute limits such as short-term exposure limits and immediately dangerous to life or health values, as well as a variety of other data such as chemical-physical properties and symptoms of exposure. The NIOSH Pocket Guide (NPG) is available as a printed, hardcopy book, a PDF version, an electronic database, and a downloadable application for mobile phones. All formats of the NIOSH Pocket Guide allow users to access the data for each chemical separately, however, the guide does not support data analytics or visualization across chemicals. This project reformatted existing data in the NPG to make it searchable and compatible with exploration and analysis using a web application. The resulting application allows users to investigate the relationships between occupational exposure limits, the range and distribution of occupational exposure limits, and the specialized sorting of chemicals by health endpoint or to summarize information of particular interest. These tasks would have previously required manual extraction of the data and analysis. The usability of this application was evaluated among industrial hygienists and researchers and while the existing application seems most relevant to researchers, the open-source code and data are amenable to modification by users to increase customization.
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NIOSH Mobile Pocket Guide

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