Wikipedia:Meetup/Virtual/Secret Origins of NIOSH

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A 1941 video about the Division of
Industrial Hygiene. Click to play an excerpt.





The Secret Origins of NIOSH Edit-a-thon

part of Virtual WikiConference North America 2020

Next year, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) celebrates the 50th anniversary of its official creation in 1971. However, NIOSH's direct predecessor, the Division of Industrial Hygiene, has a little-known history that stretches all the way back to 1914, as it zig-zagged its way through the growth and maturation of the U.S. Public Health Service.
This edit-a-thon will include a presentation on the history of the Division of Industrial Hygiene. Suggested articles focus on biographies and historic buildings related to worker and public health in the early to mid-20th century.

when

Sunday, December 13, 2020, 1–4 PM

how

WikiConference North America is virtual this year, so anyone anywhere in the world can participate! Links will be posted soon.

Agenda

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Register for the conference at https://register.wcna.wiki to get the Zoom link. Registration is free.

  • Presentations (on Zoom)
    • 12–1: Optional Wikipedia 101 training for newcomers
    • 1–1:30: The Secret Origins of NIOSH talk: the history of the Division of Industrial Hygiene and its transformation into NIOSH
  • 1:30–4: Editing (on wonder.me)

Historical overview

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NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland in 1949, with the Industrial Hygiene Laboratory at front right
 
NIOSH's main laboratories at 1014 Broadway in Downtown Cincinnati in 1974.
 
Robert A. Taft Laboratory in Columbia-Tusculum, Cincinnati in 1976, the year NIOSH occupied it

The U.S. Public Health Service Office of Industrial Hygiene and Sanitation was founded in 1914 at the Pittsburgh Marine Hospital. In 1918, it moved to Washington, D.C.

In 1937, it became part of the National Institute of Health (which was still singular at that time) and was renamed the Division of Industrial Hygiene.  Two years later, it moved into the Industrial Hygiene Laboratory, one of the first three buildings of NIH’s Bethesda campus.

In 1950, the Division of Industrial Hygiene's main functions moved to Cincinnati, occupying 1014 Broadway, a converted warehouse in downtown. PHS’s other environmental health programs had existed in Cincinnati since 1912. In 1953 it was renamed the Occupational Health Program, and in 1960, the Division of Occupational Health. As part of a major PHS-wide reorganization in 1968, it became the Bureau of Occupational Safety and Health within the new Environmental Control Administration, a predecessor of the Environmental Protection Agency.

In 1971, the Bureau became the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health as a result of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970. In 1973, NIOSH was absorbed by the Center for Disease Control. NIOSH relocated in 1976 to the Robert A. Taft Laboratory, which the former PHS environmental health divisions had vacated for the newly constructed Andrew W. Breidenbach Center.

Resources

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Articles to work on

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A 1942 poster from the Division of Industrial Hygiene
People
Buildings
Miscellaneous
Other tasks

Articles closely related to NIOSH that might pose a conflict of interest should not be directly edited by NIOSH staff. This includes edits to articles about yourself, your employer, and others with which you have a relationship.

Outcomes

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Congratulations! Your work will help others to learn about occupational safety and health topics! See this event's dashboard. Outcomes will be listed below.

Created
Improved