Request for information about International Labour Office (ILO) Reference Radiographs
April 2015
NIOSH Docket Number 282, CDC-2015-0008
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) of the Centers for Disease and Prevention is collaborating with the Labour Inspection, Labour Administration and Occupational Safety and Health Branch of the International Labour Office (ILO) in developing a set of digital reference radiographs for the ILO International Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconiosis (ILO Classification). The current ILO Classification depends on 22 standard reference radiographs that are used to formally identify and characterize pneumoconiosis and related pulmonary abnormalities arising from occupational exposure. The original standards were based on film radiography, but the advent of digital radiography has led to the need for reference standards based on digitally-acquired images. NIOSH is assisting the ILO in the process of identifying such digital images.
For this purpose, NIOSH requested trained users of the ILO Classification to submit comments regarding any of the current standard reference images that are felt to be deficient and for which improvements could be made. The current structure and format of the ILO Classification is to remain unchanged at the present time; NIOSH was not soliciting comments on the ILO Classification itself. Comments received on the ILO Classification will be considered irrelevant to the purpose of this docket.
To view the notice and related materials, visit http://www.regulations.gov and enter CDC-2015-0008 in the search field and click "Search."
Reference Documents
- Federal Register Notice: Federal Register Notice
- Federal Register Notice: Federal Register Notice
- Background Information:
- Information on the ILO Classification
- Information on the use of chest radiography in the identification and characterization of the pneumoconioses and related pulmonary diseases (including details of the NIOSH B-Reader program)
- Page last reviewed: July 23, 2015
- Page last updated: January 5, 2016
- Content source:
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Education and Information Division