Background: Although fatalities due to asthma have been reported among subjects with occupational asthma (OA) associated with re-exposure, groups of subjects with work-related asthma have not been systematically followed up for mortality. During a review of compensation claims for asthma in Ontario, we identified 3 respiratory deaths among subjects previously compensated for OA for whom their surviving spouses received death benefits. This suspected "cluster" prompted us to undertake an investigation to examine mortality pattern among workers compensated for work-related asthma.
Methods: Subjects receiving compensation for OA or aggravation of asthma (AA) between 1980 and 1993, and a comparison sample of workers with claims for musculoskeletal injuries during the same period were identified from the Ontario Workers' Compensation Board. We also identified another comparison group of non-compensated asthmatic patients seen at a hospital clinic during the same period. The files of those with work-related asthma were reviewed to determine if OA or AA was adequately documented. Mortality was ascertained by linkage with the Mortality Database at the Ontario Cancer Registry through 1996. We compared the mortality of the three groups with that expected in the general population of Ontario using SMRs, and directly by proportional-hazards regression.
Results: The study included 3,070 subjects: 1,112 with work-related OA/AA with adequate documentation, 1,556 with work-related injuries, and 402 patients with non-work-related asthma. Of the 66 deaths identified, only 2 deaths were due to asthma, both in the work-related asthma group: one from the index cluster and one not previously identified. A second index death was coded as dying from COPD not elsewhere classified (ICD9 496), while the third index death also died of asthma but there was not sufficient information documenting OA to include the subject in the analyses. As compared with the general population, there were fewer deaths than expected from most causes, except for deaths among the work-related asthma claimants and the nonwork-related asthma patients from respiratory diseases (SMRs 1.3 and 5.9, respectively; 0.5 among injury claimants), all chronic obstructive lung disease (ICD9 490-496; SMRs 2.3 and 7.7, respectively), and asthma (SMRs 18.2 and 0, respectively). In direct comparison of the work-related asthma claimants with the injury claimants, the risk of death appeared elevated from respiratory disease (RR 2.6) and ischemic heart disease (IHD) (RR 2.8) but the confidence intervals included unity.
Conclusions: This preliminary report raises the possibility that serious outcomes, including excess deaths from respiratory disease, in particular asthma, may occur among those with work-related asthma even in the absence of re-exposure. However, the findings are inconclusive given that the number of deaths was small and we identified only one new asthma death in addition to the index cluster. We also observed for the first time that deaths due to circulatory disease, particularly IHD, may also be increased among such workers; this needs to be confirmed elsewhere.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0274(199905)35:5<465::aid-ajim3>3.0.co;2-v | DOI Listing |
Cent Eur J Public Health
December 2024
Regional Public Health Authority, Presov, Slovak Republic.
Objectives: An occupational disease (OD) is a disorder or health condition which arises due to work related activities and tasks or is caused by work environment. The impact of ODs on medical and social system may be considered as a very important in relation to mortality, morbidity, and invalidity. The most common ODs in the European Union are musculoskeletal disorders (58% of all ODs in 2015).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSaf Health Work
December 2024
Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
Background: This study characterized the risk of new-onset asthma among workers in Manitoba, Canada.
Methods: Accepted time loss claims from the Workers' Compensation Board of Manitoba from 2006 to 2019, containing workers' occupations and industries, were linked with administrative health data from 1996 to 2020. After restricting the cohort to the first claim per person in an occupation and applying age and coverage exclusions, the cohort comprised 142,588 person-occupation combinations.
BJGP Open
November 2024
Insitute of Applied Health, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Background: Work-related asthma (WRA) is prevalent yet under-recognized in UK primary care.
Aim: We aimed to identify behaviour change interventions (BCI) intended for use in primary care to identify WRA, or any other chronic disease (that could be adapted for use in WRA).
Design & Setting: Systematic review METHOD: We searched CCRCT, Embase, PsychINFO and Ovid-MEDLINE databases (1946-2023) for studies describing development and/or evaluation of BCIs for case finding any chronic disease in primary care settings, aimed at either healthcare professionals and/or patients.
PLoS One
November 2024
Faculty of Public Health, Medical University of Plovdiv, Plovdiv City, Bulgaria.
Background: Occupational or work-related injuries are mostly common among hospitals' sanitary workers (SWs) in developing countries like Ethiopia. This is due to improper practiced of devices, unhygienic workplace, neglected and undermined risk factors, as well as due to lack of policy initiatives; but not studied well.
Objective: The aim of the study was to assess the occupational injuries and its associated factors among SWs in public hospitals, eastern Ethiopia: A Modified Poisson regression Model Analysis.
Sangyo Eiseigaku Zasshi
November 2024
The committee members for Allergy and Immunotoxicology (AIT), Japan Society for Occupational Health (JSOH).
Background: According to the gene-environment interactions (GEi) concept, the mechanism of health impairment can be explained by genetic factors, environmental factors, or their interaction. Physical and mental health effects resulting from environmental exposure may be classified either as toxicity, immune response, and allergic reaction. Moreover, despite the already established therapeutic approaches to bronchial asthma and decreasing mortality due to bronchial asthma, patients with difficult and severe asthma are increasing in number.
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