1. C. Black, Working for a Healthier Tomorrow: Review of the Health of Britain’s Working Age Population (London, 2008), p. 12: The term ‘health conditions’ is undoubtedly used by Black to facilitate her objective of tackling the stigma surrounding the employment of people who experience ‘health problems’.
2. P. W. J. Bartrip and S. B. Burman, The Wounded Soldiers of Industry: Industrial Compensation Policy 1833–1897 (Oxford, 1983), p. 211.
3. A. McIvor and R. Johnston, Miner’s Lung: A History of Dust Disease in British Coal Mining (Aldershot, 2007), pp. 123–144.
4. E. Scarry, The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World (Oxford, 1985), p. 3.
5. J. Greenlees, ‘“Stop Kissing and Steaming!” Tuberculosis and the Occupational Health Movement in Massachusetts and Lancashire, 1870— 1918’, Urban History, 32 (2005), 223–246.