01876 2200325 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001500097041000800112082001000120084001600130100001900146245007500165260003500240300003600275500002100311500002500332520097100357650001701328650002001345650001001365700002501375990002501400990002501425990002501450990002501475990002501500990002501525INLIS00000000000489220221112094241 a0010-0520004892221112 | | eng  a0071375589 aeng a628.9 a628.9 VEA c0 aVeasey, D.Alan1 aConfined Space Entry and Emergency Response /cD.Alan Veasey [et .al.] aNew York :bMcGraw Hill,c2002 axxi, 486p. :b: illus, ;c29cm. aIncluding CD-ROM aIndeks : p.473 - 486 aThis book addresses the information and training needs of two distinct but overlapping populations: those involved in routine entry and work in confined spaces and those involved in confined space rescue. Examples of routine entrants include industrial workers who enter vessels and public employees who enter utility vaults. Rescuers include private sector rescue teams and public emergency services personnel who may be called on to perform confined space rescue. Entrants and rescuers face similar hazards and have interrelated training needs, making an approach that integrates confined space entry and confined space emergency response logical. In teaching confined space entry and rescue for number of years, we (the authors) never found a book that we believed adequately addressed the needs of both entrants and rescuers, so we wrote Confined Space Entry and Emergency Response. We believe that it meets the informationa and training needs of others as well. 4aFire engines 4aFire prevention 4aFires0 aLisa Craft McCormick a11171/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a11172/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a11172/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a11171/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a11171/MKRI-P/XI-2008 a11172/MKRI-P/XI-2008