The utility of the Supplementary Data System (SDS) compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) in conducting surveillance of occupational skin disease was evaluated by examining 14,703 workers' compensation cases reported to the SDS for the year 1981. Combined with state employment denominators
Surveillance of occupational skin disease: EPIDERM and OPRA
โ Scribed by N. Cherry; J.D. Meyer; A. Adisesh; R. Brooke; V. Owen-Smith; C. Swales; M.H. Beck
- Book ID
- 104459475
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 425 KB
- Volume
- 142
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-0963
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Consultant dermatologists in the U.K. have been reporting to EPIDERM, a voluntary surveillance scheme for occupational skin disease, since February 1993; reporting by occupational physicians to the scheme began in May 1994 and was superseded in January 1996 by OPRA (Occupational Physicians Reporting Activity). Currently 244 dermatologists and 790 occupational physicians report incident cases to these schemes. During the 6 years to January 1999 a total of 12,574 new cases of occupational skin disease was estimated from reports by consultant dermatologists and 10,136 cases estimated from occupational physicians (since May 1994). The annual incidence of occupational contact dermatitis using data from both schemes was 12ยท9 per 100,000 workers. The incidence of contact dermatitis per 100,000 workers increased with age in men from 4ยท9 (age 16โ29 years) to 6ยท6 (age 45โ60 years); in women a higher rate (9ยท5) was apparent in the younger age group, with lower rates in older female workers. High rates in young workers were associated with wet work and in older workers with exposure to oils. For men, high rates of contact dermatitis were seen in reports from both schemes for chemical operatives, machine tool setters and operatives, coach and spray painters and metal workers. For women, high rates were found for hairdressers, biological scientists and laboratory workers, nurses and those working in catering. The most frequent agents for contact dermatitis were rubber chemicals and materials (14ยท1% of cases reported by dermatologists), soaps and cleaners (12ยท7%), nickel (11ยท9%), wet work (11ยท1%), personal protective equipment (6ยท2%), petroleum products (6ยท3%), cutting oils and coolants (5ยท6%), and epoxy and other resins (6ยท1%). In the 1608 estimated cases of skin cancer all but 4% were attributed to ultraviolet radiation. Cases of contact urticaria attributed to latex peaked in 1996, with a decline in cases since that time.
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