National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH, /ˈnaɪɒʃ/) is the United States federal agency responsible for conducting research and making recommendations for the prevention of work-related injury and illness.

NIOSH is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

[1] NIOSH is a professionally diverse organization with a staff of 1,200 people representing a wide range of disciplines including epidemiology, medicine, industrial hygiene, safety, psychology, engineering, chemistry, and statistics.

The Occupational Safety and Health Act, signed by President Richard M. Nixon on December 29, 1970, created NIOSH out of the preexisting Division of Industrial Hygiene founded in 1914.

NIOSH provides national and world leadership to prevent work-related illness, injury, disability, and death by gathering information, conducting scientific research, and translating the knowledge gained into products and services.

[3] NIOSH has several "virtual centers" through which researchers at its geographically dispersed locations are linked by shared computer networks and other technologies that stimulates collaboration and helps overcome the challenges of working as a team across distances.

NIOSH may also "conduct on-site investigations (Health Hazard Evaluations) to determine the toxicity of materials used in workplaces" and "fund research by other agencies or private organizations through grants, contracts, and other arrangements".

The knowledge obtained through intramural and extramural research programs is used to develop products and publication offering innovative solutions for a wide range of work settings.

Some of the publications produced by NIOSH include: The National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory (NPPTL) is a research center within the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, devoted to research on personal protective equipment (PPE).

Through the centers, NIOSH supports academic degree programs and research opportunities, as well as continuing education for OSH professionals.

[22] Founded in 1977, NIOSH ERCs are responsible for nearly half of post-baccalaureate graduates entering occupational health and safety fields.

[37] When the U.S. Bureau of Mines was closed in 1996, its research activities were transferred to NIOSH along with two facilities in the Pittsburgh suburb of Bruceton, Pennsylvania, and in Spokane, Washington.

NIOSH preserved the administrative independence of these activities by placing them in the new Office of Mine Safety and Health Research.

It later become known as the Alaska Pacific Regional Office, and in 2015, the Denver, Anchorage, and non-mining Spokane staff joined into the Western States Division.

NIOSH FACE report
NIOSH Fatality Assessment and Control Evaluation report on electrical hazards
Screenshot of the initial NIOSH CEL program with respirator with schedules, and a window with TC-84A respirators open
Screenshot of one of the early electronic releases of the NIOSH CEL, dated September 30, 2001
Staff members at the NIOSH research center in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1978
A black-and-white aerial photograph of a long, narrow six-story building
NIOSH occupied the Robert A. Taft Center as its main facility in 1976. It had opened in 1954 for the U.S. Public Health Service 's environmental health division, which had been transferred to the Environmental Protection Agency and had moved to a new facility.
An aerial photograph of a series of two- and three-story buildings on a hill
NIOSH absorbed the Bureau of Mines ' research activities in 1996, along with its facilities in the Pittsburgh area dating from 1910.