TY - JOUR AB - 148 ANNALS OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE U.S. Government Publications Nursing (continued) began to increase substantially. Understanding how the OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH use of NPs, PAs, and CNMs affect the quality of care, the access to care, the productivity of providers, and the costs of care is crucial for analyzing the effects of alterĀ­ The Role of Genetic Testing in the Prevention of native policies regarding payment for the services of these Occupational Disease providers. Office of Technology Assessment: Congress of the United States Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing 1983 SIN: 052-003-00906-4 256 pages; $6.50 This report examines a technology, genetic testing, u.s. Department of Health and Human Services that may be useful in reducing occupational disease, but 1986 SIN: 017-024-01285-8 264 pages; $7.00 that also raises concerns about potential misuse. Genetic No one disputes the fact there are urgent, unmet testing encompasses two major techniques: one that may needs in the psychiatric-mental health systems of eduĀ­ be able to identify individual workers who are genetically cation, research, service, and policy. These needs, which at higher risk to disease, and another that may serve as have been expressed by psychiatric-mental health nursing an early warning system that exposure to a hazardous professionals, are addressed TI - Occupational Health JF - Annals of Behavioral Medicine DO - 10.1093/abm/10.4.148 DA - 1988-12-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/oxford-university-press/occupational-health-7XV0AHQqog SP - 148 EP - 149 VL - 10 IS - 4 DP - DeepDyve ER -