7 results match your criteria: "Italian National Institute for Insurance against Accidents at Work (Inail)[Affiliation]"

The Impact of Sports Training on the Spinal Cord Injury Individual's Balance.

Sensors (Basel)

December 2024

Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Epidemiology and Hygiene, Italian National Institute for Insurance Against Accidents at Work (INAIL), Via Fontana Candida 1, 00078 Monte Porzio Catone, Italy.

Spinal cord injury (SCI) causes major challenges to mobility and daily life activities and maintaining balance becomes a crucial issue. Individuals with SCI often need to adopt new strategies to manage balance with minimal discomfort. Sports and physical activities have become one of the most popular rehabilitation methods for people with SCI.

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Urban trees are crucial in delivering essential ecosystem services, including air pollution mitigation. This service is influenced by plant associated microbiomes, which can degrade hydrocarbons, support tree health, and influence ecological processes. Yet, our understanding of tree microbiomes remains limited, thus affecting our ability to assess and quantify the ecosystem services provided by trees as complex systems.

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Sector of Employment and Mortality: A Cohort Based on Different Administrative Archives.

Int J Environ Res Public Health

May 2023

Department of Epidemiology-Lazio Regional Health Service, ASL Roma 1, 00147 Rome, Italy.

Administrative data can be precious in connecting information from different sectors. For the first time, we used data from the National Social Insurance Agency (INPS) to investigate the association between the occupational sectors and both non-accidental and accidental mortality. We retrieved information on occupational sectors from 1974 to 2011 for private sector workers included in the 2011 census cohort of Rome.

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Mortality from occupational diseases significantly afflicts society, in terms of both economic costs and human suffering. The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimated that 2.4 million workers die from work-related diseases every year.

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L'impatto dell'esposizione occupazionale ad amianto sul tumore del polmone in Italia.

Epidemiol Prev

November 2021

Department of Epidemiology, Lazio Regional Health Service, ASL Roma 1, Rome (Italy).

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to analyze lung cancer death rates linked to asbestos exposure across various occupational sectors, focusing especially on the construction industry in Italy.
  • A comprehensive literature review and database search were conducted to gather data from studies published from 1999 to May 2019, targeting workers in industries most affected by asbestos exposure.
  • Results indicated a standardized mortality ratio (SMR) for lung cancer ranging from 1.05 to 2.36 in men across different sectors, with notable risks in asbestos-cement, construction, and mining, showing a pattern of increased lung cancer cases relative to mesothelioma deaths.
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Objectives: to evaluate the patterns of occupational COVID-19 cases, based on compensation claims applied to the Italian National Institute for Insurance against Accidents at Work (Inail).

Design: descriptive analyses of daily time series of compensation claims applications, geographical distributions, and occupations involved. Multivariate analyses have been performed for identifying significant epidemiological pattern.

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For workplaces where significant diurnal variations in radon concentrations are likely, measurements to evaluate average radon concentration during working hours could be useful for planning an optimized protection of workers according to the 2013/59/Euratom Directive. However, very few studies on this subject, generally limited to periods of few weeks, have been published. Therefore, a study has been conducted to evaluate the actual long-term radon exposure during working hours for a sample of 33 workplaces of four different types (postal offices, shops, restaurants, municipal offices), mainly located at the ground floor, and with expected considerable air exchange rate occurring during working hours due to frequent entrance/exit of persons or mechanical ventilation.

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