David Michaels
@drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
2.1K followers 170 following 140 posts
Epidemiologist, Professor GW School of Public Health; Longest serving OSHA head (2009-17); former Asst Secretary of Energy for Environment, Safety, & Health; Author: Triumph of Doubt: Dark Money and the Science of Deception. http://drdavidmichaels.com
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drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
I'm new to Bluesky so a little about me: I teach at the George Washington University School of Public Health. My expertise and passion is worker safety.

I ran the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 2009-2017, and was the longest serving administrator in OSHA's history. 1/
Reposted by David Michaels
jbarab.bsky.social
Logging, mining, firefighting, confined space, lightning, highway construction, crushed by stone slab, vehicle incidents and shootings. On average, over 100 workers are killed every week in the United States due to traumatic injuries suffered at work: The Weekly Toll
jordanbarab.com/confinedspac...
Weekly Toll: Workers Killed on the Job - Confined Space
On average, over 100 workers are killed every week in the United States due to traumatic injuries suffered at work. Here are how a few died last week.
jordanbarab.com
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
The study, a collaboration with Harvard colleagues Barrak Alahmad, William Kessler, Yazan Alwadi, Joel Schwartz, & Gregory R. Wagner, supports the importance of OSHA issuing a strong, protective standard.

It also demonstrates the value of the huge OSHA ITA injury data set in injury prevention 2/2
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Extreme heat at work strains the body and the mind.

We geocoded 845,000 work injuries reported by employers and found that injury risk increases with heat.

But these injuries are preventable! Risk is lower in the 5 states (CA, CO, MN, OR, WA) with OSHA heat standards. 1/2
tinyurl.com/8x2j66cj
A nationwide analysis of heat and workplace injuries in the United States - Environmental Health
Background Exposure to heat leads to physiological and cognitive impairments that increase the risk of workplace injuries. This study estimates the number and proportion of work injuries reported to the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) that can be attributed to heat exposure. These estimates contribute to the calculation of the benefits of standards, policies, and programs that reduce workplace exposure to extreme heat. Methods We analyzed all 2023 injury cases reported to OSHA's Injury Tracking Application by establishments with 100 or more employees, primarily in high-hazard industries. Each injury was geocoded and matched with high-resolution weather data for the specific injury date. Using a case-crossover design, we compared heat index on each injury day (case) with matched non-injury control days for the same worker. Conditional logistic regression was applied separately for summer-only and year-round periods with a non-linear term for heat index to estimate the odds ratios for injury occurrence. We additionally examined heat-injury patterns by industry sectors and in states with/without workplace heat standards. Results The odds of work injury increased non-linearly with a rising heat index: the pooled national estimate showed a clear upward trend starting around 85°F and accelerating above 90°F. Our results were consistent across nearly all industry sectors, including those that are predominantly indoors. Using a heat index of 80°F as reference, odds ratios (OR) of injuries at or above 90°F, 100°F and 110°F were 1.03 (95% confidence intervals [CI]: 1.02, 1.04), 1.10 (1.07, 1.13), and 1.20 (1.13, 1.26), respectively. At a heat index of 110°F or higher, the odds increased by 22% in states without occupational heat rules (OR=1.22; 1.15,1.29) versus 9% in states with rules (OR=1.09; 0.84, 1.41), suggesting a protective effect, although confidence intervals overlapped. Overall, we estimate 1.18% (95% empirical CI: 0.92%, 1.45%) of all injuries were attributable to heat exposure on days exceeding a heat index of 70°F. Conclusion Heat exposure increases the overall risk of work injury, an effect consistent across nearly all major industries.
tinyurl.com
Reposted by David Michaels
timothynoah.bsky.social
The Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building is, one expert told me, “the Sistine Chapel of New Deal art.” GSA had a plan earlier this year to save it. Now Trump is rushing to sell it.

Save the Cohen, part 2, explains how we got here. Please share widely!

newrepublic.com/article/2012...
There Was a Plan to Save These New Deal Masterpieces. Then Trump Won.
A feasibility study was underway about restoring the ailing federal building that houses important Ben Shahn frescoes, Philip Guston murals, and other FDR-era artwork. But the Trump administration put...
newrepublic.com
Reposted by David Michaels
lizborkowski.bsky.social
"For every dollar the federal government saves in the president’s proposed budget for CDC, state and local economies would lose $1.40."

Jeffrey Levi & Anne Reid explain how proposed budget cuts would lead to more disease and deaths.
thehill.com/opinion/heal...
thehill.com
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Thanks for this statement. But asking again - do you post the conflict of interest declarations?
echa.europa.eu
All consultants working for ECHA must formally declare any potential professional conflicting interest and commit to working independently from industry or other interests to ensure integrity in their work. This is a condition for signing a contract with ECHA.
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Thank you for this reply. As noted, Ramboll has worked for numerous producers of toxic substances that are in ECHA’s jurisdiction. Does ECHA publish consultants' conflict of interest declarations? If so, where?

If not, in the interest of transparency, would ECHA post Ramboll's COI declaration?
echa.europa.eu
1/2 We take allegations on our independence and impartiality seriously. We're committed to safeguarding scientific independence & public trust in our work. Our use of consultants is subject to strict guidelines and transparency rules. All consultants must declare any potential conflicts of interest.
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Ramboll opposed efforts to limit exposure to the carcinogenic chemical #chloroprene in Louisiana's cancer alley and to weaken drinking water protections from rocket fuel chemical #perchlorate.

I cover these and more in my book The Triumph of Doubt: Dark Money and the Science of Deception. 5/5
BOOKS | David Michaels
David Michaels is author of "The Triumph of Doubt: Dark Money and the Science of Deception" (2020) and "Doubt Is Their Product: How Industry's Assault on Science Threatens Your Health" (2008).
www.drdavidmichaels.com
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
For a group of trade associations, including the American Petroleum Institute, Ramboll disputed the classification of diesel exhaust as a human carcinogen.

For the International Lead Association, it questioned studies that find neurological effects of low levels of lead exposure in children. 4/5
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Not surprisingly, Ramboll's "experts" advised ECHA to delay public health protections

Product defense is what Ramboll does.

For Reynolds Tobacco, it questioned the increased risk of addiction from menthol cigarettes. 3/5
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
Severe Conflict of Interest Alert:

@alicemhancock.bsky.social exposes Danish firm Ramboll's conflicted work on #PFAS - the firm is employed by both the European Chemicals Agency (ECHA-the EU chemical regulator) and by producers of PFAS products impacted by #ECHA regulations. 1/5
EU hired advisers on ‘forever chemicals’ who worked for manufacturers
Ramboll consultancy advised both the bloc’s regulator on PFAS and the chemical makers
tinyurl.com
Reposted by David Michaels
maxkozlov.bsky.social
Yesterday's presser is perhaps the most glaring example of the discrepancy between the Trump admin's words (gold standard science! rigor! reproducibility!) and their actions (citing a couple correlative studies to make massive policy changes).

Placebo RCTs for thee, observational study for me.
Reposted by David Michaels
matthewcpierson.bsky.social
Ahh yes, those growth promoting investments: microcaptive insurance and basis shifting through complex partnerships
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
The US Chemical Safety Board investigates fires, explosions, & other workplace disasters, helping prevent future ones. It is supported by industry, unions, first responders, even the American Chemical Council.

But Trump wants to shut it down.

Check out this @pbsnews.org clip.
tinyurl.com/556ahk9e
Only federal agency that investigates chemical disasters faces shutdown under Trump
The U.S. Chemical Safety Hazard and Investigation Board, or CSB, investigates root causes of serious chemical accidents and makes recommendations for preventing similar events. The Trump administratio...
tinyurl.com
drdavidmichaels.bsky.social
💯
josephpolitano.bsky.social
Just for the record, Wiatrowski is a longtime BLS employee, a dedicated public servant, someone who has been acting commissioner before, and someone I would have total confidence in during a normal transfer of power. The scary part is who they replace *him* with.
peark.es
New acting BLS head is this guy
Reposted by David Michaels
jbarab.bsky.social
After a city employee died in a trench collapse in Milton, WV, the city plans to "opt in" to a voluntary public employee OSHA program.

That would make it the only city in the entire state to protect its workers.

WV & 22 other states need laws protecting ALL public employees.
tinyurl.com/324emjar
City Decides to Protect Public Employees. Where's the Rest of the State? - Confined Space
Following the death of a city employee, the city of Milton, WV has decided to protect its public employees. But no other city in WV protects its workers
jordanbarab.com
Reposted by David Michaels
mikeelk.bsky.social
450 were napped by ICE at a Hyundai construction site in Georgia, where 3 workers had been killed.

Workers complained about the deaths to Trump's OSHA, which did nothing.

Instead, ICE showed up in an act viewed as retaliatory.

paydayreport.com/450-napped-b...
450 Napped by ICE at Hyundai Georgia Plant, Where 3 Workers Were Killed Previously
Since the Trump Administration took over and began cutting back on federal workplace safety enforcement, two workers have died at the plant in just two months.
paydayreport.com
Reposted by David Michaels
adamdean.bsky.social
Trump's mix of high tariffs and union-busting won't deliver higher wages or new manufacturing jobs for American workers - it will just increase profits for corporations.

Check out my new report with @epi.org:
epi.org
Trump's broad & historically high tariffs are bad for everyone.

But even strategic tariffs aren’t guaranteed to protect workers without unions.

Tariffs can protect industries, but only unions protect workers.

Read more on why Trump’s trade policy won’t help US workers: www.epi.org/publication/...
Unions raise wages. Tariffs don’t: Why Trump’s trade policy won’t help U.S. workers
Summary Tariffs do not automatically raise wages or create good jobs. While protectionist trade policies can help preserve jobs in industries facing unfair competition, strong unions are a prerequisit...
www.epi.org