Environmental and Industrial Agents
- Arvidson, C. R., & Colledge, P. (1996). Lead screening in children: the role of the school nurse. Journal of School Nursing, 12(3), 8-13.
- Baker, J. E. (1992). Primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention in reducing pesticide-related illness in farmers. Journal of Community Health Nursing, 9(4), 245-254.
- de Castro, A. B. (2003). Mercury disposal at home. American Journal of Nursing, 103(11), 13.
- Hall, A. G. (2006). Nurses: taking precautionary action on a pediatric environmental exposure: DEHP. Pediatric Nursing, 32(1), 91-93.
- Khalili, B., Montanaro, M. T., & Bardana, E. J., Jr. (2005). Inhalational mold toxicity: fact or fiction? A clinical review of 50 cases. Annals of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology, 95(3), 239-246.
- Kimmel, C. A., Collman, G. W., Fields, N., & Eskenazi, B. (2005). Lessons learned for the National Children’s Study from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Centers for Children’s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research. Environmental Health Perspective, 113(10), 1414-1418.
- King, C., & Harber, P. (1998). Community environmental health concerns and the nursing process. Four environmental health nursing care plans. AAOHN Journal, 46(1), 20-27.
- Kirk, M. (2002). The impact of globalization and environmental change on health: challenges for nurse education. Nurse Education Today, 22(1), 60-71; discussion 72-65.
- Kleffel, D. (1991). An ecofeminist analysis of nursing knowledge. Nurs Forum, 26(4), 5-18.
- Kleffel, D. (1991). Rethinking the environment as a domain of nursing knowledge. ANS. Advances in Nursing Science, 14(1), 40-51.
- Kleffel, D. (1996). Environmental paradigms: moving toward an ecocentric perspective. ANS. Advances in Nursing Science, 18(4), 1-10.
- Krieger, J., & Higgins, D. L. (2002). Housing and health: time again for public health action. American Journal of Public Health, 92(5), 758-768.
- Malcoe, L. H., Lynch, R. A., Keger, M. C., & Skaggs, V. J. (2002). Lead sources, behaviors, and socioeconomic factors in relation to blood lead of native american and white children: a community-based assessment of a former mining area. Environmental Health Perspectives, 110 Suppl 2, 221-231.
- Morgan, L. (1996). Children and lead: A model of care for community health and primary care providers. Family and Community Health, 19(1), 42-48.
- Primomo, J. (1990). Diapering decisions: a community education project. American Journal of Public Health, 80(6), 743-744.
- Primomo, J., Bruck, A. M., Greenstreet, P. K., Leaders, L. A., Pennylegion, L., Salazar, M. K., et al. (1990). The high environmental cost of disposable diapers. MCN; American Journal of Maternal Child Nursing, 15(5), 279, 282, 284.
- Salazar, M. K., Napolitano, M., Scherer, J. A., & McCauley, L. A. (2004). Hispanic adolescent farmworkers’ perceptions associated with pesticide exposure. Western Journal of Nursing Research, 26(2), 146-166; discussion 167-175.
- Sattler, B. (2002). Environmental health in the health care setting. American Nurse, 34(2), 25-38; quiz 39-40.
- Vasquez, V. B., Minkler, M., & Shepard, P. (2006). Promoting environmental health policy through community based participatory research: a case study from Harlem, New York. Journal of Urban Health, 83(1), 101-110.