29
Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Page 2: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Early recognition of occupational diseases Occupational disease surveillance

Fitness for work determinationGeneral health screening

Diabetes, hyperlipidema, …

Page 3: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Treatment & control of early recognized occupational diseases

Prevention from progression of ODs to advanced & compensable disease

Incidence & prevalence of occupational diseases As a main performance indicator in

occupational health system Distribution of various type of ODs

Occupational disease clusters

Page 4: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Reporting & notification system▪Well-defined▪ Proper structure

Page 5: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Reporting System ( Notifying system ) Referral system Industry level ( first-line ) General occupational physicians

Definite Diagnosis Specialized level ( second-line) Clinical ( Management and FFW ) Legal aspects ( compensation )

Page 6: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 7: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 8: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 9: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

1. A specialized referral system 2. Prioritize the most important ODs

Priority disease groups Notifiable occupational diseases

3. Case-definition tables for first-line GPs 4. Training the GPs 5. Active surveillance of ODs 6. Consulting & referring the identified

cases 7. Reporting the confirmed cases 8. Take control & preventive actions 9. Prevalence & incidence 10. Analyze the results

Page 10: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 11: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Lack of standard reporting systemLack of medical expertise of

occupational GPs Due to Insufficient training

Less awareness of job influence on worker’s health

Lack of awareness among employees for reporting their illness

Page 12: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 13: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Refusal to notify disease by:Employers

Fear visit of agencies, closure of operations, stop work order

Employees Fear job loss or reduce income

Factory doctors Fear of contract loss

Page 14: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 15: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Noise-induced hearing lossOccupational asthmaLumbosacral disc herniationCarpal tunnel syndromeOccupational dermatitisOccupational cancers:

Lung, skin, mesothelioma, bladder, sinus, liver, leukemia,

Page 16: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases

Clinical diagnostic criteria

Exposure criteria Causative exposures Minimum exposure intensity Minimum exposure duration Minimum latency period

Page 17: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 18: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 19: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 20: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 21: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 22: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 23: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 24: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 25: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 26: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 27: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 28: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases
Page 29: Recognition & Reporting of Occupational Diseases