Aim: Current Italian legislation obliges employers to prevent workers who are occupationally at risk or who perform jobs that may be hazardous for the safety or health of third parties from consuming alcohol. The LaRA Group undertook to assess whether the law fully safeguards the health and safety of both workers and third parties, without impinging upon the civil rights of workers.
Method: A written document expressing agreement was produced following discussions between doctors, lawyers, bioethicists and social partners.
Background: Italian Law 81/08 (so-called "Unified Text of Laws on Health and Safety at Work"), came into force on 15 May 2008 and incorporates provisions related to medical surveillance of drug and alcohol dependency at the workplace.
Objectives: Occupational health traditionally addresses the issue of protection of worker from occupational hazards. The issue of protection of third parties from behaviour of workers resulting from drug and alcohol dependency implies an original methodological approach, involving full cooperation of employer, employees, and health and safety consultants.
Workers with handicap or psychological impairment are frequently submitted to mobbing. If causative factors of psychological disorders are not recognized, the physician charged of medical surveillance of workers may himself become a prosecutor and enhance the mobbing actions to the extent that the mobbed worker is discharged. In order to avoid this undue effect, the physician should strictly adhere to the body of legislation and to good occupational medicine practices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: A worker is considered to be hazardous to others when, in the course of performing a specific work task, his/her health problems (e.g., substance dependence, emotional disorders, physical disability, transmissible diseases) pose a risk for other workers' or the public's health and safety, or begins to interfere with ability to function in profession life.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeiomyosarcomas of the pulmonary arteries are rare neoplasms seldom diagnosed during the patient's lifetime. We report a case of unexpected death in a 44-year-old man due to a leiomyosarcoma originating from the main pulmonary trunk and involving the right and left arteries as far as the lobar ramifications. The patient died after a 2-year history of bronchiectasis and chronic bronchopneumonia with weight loss and occasional episodes of syncope during the last 4 months.
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