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BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2

BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

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Page 1: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE

Day 2

Page 2: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND

HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Page 3: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

What experience to you have?

Page 4: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Health Surveillance is a generic term: any procedure undertaken to assess, review or monitor an individual’s health in order to identify or detect any significant change from normality.

There are three reasons for health surveillance at work:– to ensure adverse health effects related to the work are identified

at an early stage; sometimes this is statutory, e.g. in relation to work with lead.

– to ensure continued medical fitness for specific tasks like diving or fire fighting

– to promote general health.

Page 5: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Health surveillance techniques should be:

• Highly sensitive

• Specific in their ability to detect effects at an early and reversible stage.

• Safe.

• Preferably non-invasive and acceptable to the employee.

• Cost is also a consideration.

• Results of health surveillance should lead to some action of benefit to the health of employees.

Page 6: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

BIOLOGICAL MONITORING

Biological monitoring is an integral part of health surveillance and is the measurement of human tissues, fluids or behaviour in comparison with what is considered to be a normal range of values.

– Medical confidentiality applies.– Can establish not only exposure but also its effect on an individual or

group of people.

Biological measurements can determine:-– the content of a toxic material or its metabolite in blood, urine and

breath– Its effects on enzyme systems or metabolic pathways– Early reversible tissue change– Physiological changes Immunological changes.

Page 7: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Types of Measurements Urine

– Cells (exfoliate cytology) - bladder cancer– Level of toxin e.g. mercury– Level of metabolite eg TCA (tricarboxylic acid)– Protein (especially kidney damage)– Bile (jaundice)– Sugar (diabetes) - relevant to shift work, public service vehicle (PSV)

driving

Blood– Full blood count and haemoglobin - lead, benzene, alcohol, work in

the tropics– Serum (deep frozen) - baseline antibody levels in pathogen exposure– Liver function tests - alcohol, hepatotoxic chemicals – Renal function tests - kidney toxins – Toxin levels - e.g. lead– Metabolite levels - e.g. ALA.

Page 8: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Types of Measurements

Skin– Appearance – Prick testing

Breath– Dichloromethane and carbon monoxide exposure.

Vision– Acuity tests e.g. lorry drivers, pilots etc. – Colour blindness tests e.g. civil aviation, railways,

microscopy.

Page 9: BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE Day 2. 8 - BIOLOGICAL MONITORING AND HEALTH SURVEILLANCE

Types of Measurements

X-rays– Chest x-rays are useful for conditions such as infection– Pneumoconiosis chest x-rays

Neurological tests – Mental function – Nerve transmission– Handwriting tests (detects early tremors)

Audiometry– The lowest intensity of hearing

Lung function tests– Lung volume– Airways resistance.