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1.
Occupational Health Unit
Royal Free Hospital Basic Concepts in Occupational Medicine
2. Aims & Objectives Aim:
To be able to apply the basic principles of occupational medicine to your professional practice as doctors
Objectives:
1. Know what questions to ask in order to take an appropriate and relevant occupational history
2. Identify factors or patterns in a patient’s history that may indicate a work related contribution to ill health
3. Consider a work related health dilemma and reach a conclusion with reasons
4. List 3 causative agents and related work activities for occupational asthma, allergic contact dermatitis and cancer.
5. Specify what information is necessary to make a fully informed assessment of an individual’s medical fitness for work
3. Occupational Health Work Health
(occupational disease/work related ill health)
Health Work
(medical fitness for work)
4. Occupational Health/Therapy Occupational Medicine/Health
a branch of medicine concerned with the interaction between health and work (“occupation”) Occupational Therapy
assessment & treatment to enable maximum independent function in daily living, using purposeful activity (“occupation”)
5. Case 1: The Hazards of Work You are an occupational physician.
A 31-year-old laboratory technician is referred to your clinic by her manager, because of alleged lateness and poor performance at work. You are asked to assess whether there is an underlying medical cause for this.
She tells you that she has not been sleeping well lately, possibly due to nocturnal coughing. She says the lab is cold and drafty, and that by the end of the working day her right arm is aching. She says that when she told her manager, he was unsympathetic; telling her she should leave if she doesn’t like the job.
1. What are the presenting medical problems?
2. What are the possible work-related causes of her symptoms?
3. What are the potential hazards in her workplace and how might you classify them?
4. How will you respond to the manager’s questions?
6. Classification of work hazards Physical
Mechanical
Chemical
Biological
Psychosocial
7. Hazard and Risk Hazard: potentially harmful
Risk: probability of harm
(quantifiable as risk assessment)
8. Identify
Evaluate
Control
Eliminate
Substitute
Enclose/separate
PPE/vaccinate Principles of Control of Workplace Hazards
9. Case 2: Is it work-related? A 58-year-old hospital porter has been off sick for almost a year, with low back pain. He says he injured his back at work. His back pain has not improved with physiotherapy and analgesia. He has difficulty walking up and down stairs and is breathless on exertion. His occupational history is as follows:
· Left school at 15
· Had numerous labouring jobs in the construction industry for 20 years or so
· Worked on a tunnelling project for 18 months
· Worked as a lorry driver for a brewery for 8 years
· Worked as a hospital domestic assistant for 2 years
· Has been employed as a hospital porter for 11 years
1. What occupational hazards might account for his breathlessness?
2. How would you assess whether his symptoms are work related or not?
3. What are the possible causes of his back pain?
4. What advice would you give him?
5. Is he likely to be return to work?
6. What work might he be able to do?
10. Pathology
Timing of symptoms
Possible causes
Elicit relevant history Presentation of Occupational Disease
11. The Occupational History What is your job? What do you do for a living?
What do you do at work? What do you work with? What is a typical working day?
How long? What else?
Any known hazards? Anyone else with similar symptoms?
Hobbies? (DIY, pets, gardening, chemicals)
12. Occupational Asthma Occupational Asthma
Asthma induced by specific substances encountered in the work place. It may occur in individuals who would otherwise not have developed asthma
Work-related Asthma
Asthma which relates to substances in the work place (resp irritants) that exacerbate asthma in people with pre-existing asthma
13. Causes of Occupational Asthma Isocynates
Platinum salts
Proteolytic enzymes
Wood dusts
Glutaraldehyde
Soya bean
Persulphates or henna
Crustaceans or fish products
Grain / Flour (barley, oats, wheat, maize)
Caster bean dust
Laboratory animals
Antibiotics
Latex
Soldering flux (colophony)
Ispaghula
Tea dust
14. Dose response relationship
19. Investigation of a case of suspected Occupational Asthma History
Symptoms
Associated symptoms
Duration
Work history
Is patient aware of exposure to any respiratory sensitisers at work?
Timing of symptoms (immediate /delayed)
Improvement away from work
Adult onset
Smoking history
History of atopy
20. Investigation of a case of suspected Occupational Asthma Clinical investigations
2hrly PEFR
Skin prick test
RAST / ELISA
Spirometry
Bronchial challenge
22. Management Drug treatment
as for non-occupational asthma
Non-drug treatment
Remove from exposure
Review work place
Is prevention possible?
Are control measures adequate?
Compliance with (COSHH) regulations?
Health surveillance
24. Occupational Dermatitis Endogenous (constitutional)
Exogenous (contact)
Irritant (acute/chronic)
Allergic (immediate/delayed)
25. Occupational Dermatitis Allergic
Latency
Lag period
Eye lid swelling
Papules and vesicles
Exposure to a known sensitiser
Irritant
usually involves the hands
Scaling and redness
Papules and vesicles are unusual
Exposure to a known irritant
26. Causes of Occupational Dermatitis Irritant
“Wet work”
Soap
detergents
vegetable juices/fruit
fish/meat
dough Allergic
Latex
Biocides/preservatives (e.g. formaldehyde)
Chrome salts
Plant allergens (e.g. onion, garlic, spices)
Epoxy resin monomers
Hairdressing chemicals
27. History Duration
Site
Work history
Exposure to known allergens/irritants
Improvement away from work
Treatment
28. Management Avoid exposure
Allergen/irritant replacement
Skin protection
Change job
Drug treatment
29. Occupational Cancer Target Organ
Lung
Nasal sinuses
Urothelial tract
Liver(angiosarcoma) Carcinogen
Asbestos, As, Be, Cd, Cr(VI), Ni, Fe, BCME
Ni
Rubber, Dyes, Al, Tar/pitch
VCM
30. Industrial Injuries Disablement Benefit Prescribed diseases (IIAC)
relevant disease
relevant occupation
Administered by DWP
31. Case 3: Assessing fitness for work Y You are an occupational physician.
A 29-year old HIV positive doctor has been offered a post on an anaesthesia rotation.
1. Is it relevant to know how HIV was acquired?
2. How will you assess whether s/he is medically fit for the job?
3. What information will you need, to make a fully informed assessment?
32. Fitness for work Job
Relevant medical history
Risks (self, colleagues, employer, public)
33. A Model Framework for Assessment of Medical Fitness for Work
34. Aims & Objectives Aim:
To be able to apply the basic principles of occupational medicine to your professional practice as doctors
Objectives:
1. Know what questions to ask in order to take an appropriate and relevant occupational history
2. Identify factors or patterns in a patient’s history that may indicate a work related contribution to ill health
3. Consider a work related health dilemma and reach a conclusion with reasons
4. List 3 causative agents and related work activities for occupational asthma, allergic contact dermatitis and cancer.
5. Specify what information is necessary to make a fully informed assessment of an individual’s medical fitness for work