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Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology (EPI 256) Unit 1: Introduction. Robyn R.M. Gershon, MHS, DrPH UCSF April 4, 2012. Overview of Field of Occupational Epidemiology. Historical context Occupational health Early 1900s Led by medical scientists and practitioners, field emerged
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Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology(EPI 256)Unit 1: Introduction Robyn R.M. Gershon, MHS, DrPH UCSF April 4, 2012
Overview of Field of Occupational Epidemiology • Historical context • Occupational health • Early 1900s • Led by medical scientists and practitioners, field emerged • Field of toxicology started to form • Government – US PH Service • Public oversight • Infrastructure for surveillance and oversight • Passage of first workers’ compensation laws (economic) • Health care coverage (injury centric)
Overview of Field of Occupational Epidemiology • Role of the occupational physicians • Emerged from industry • Labor unions 1910 – 1920 pushed for agenda on occupational health • First textbook on occupational medicine (A. Hamilton, 1925) ...but field languished for over a decade.
Emerging Professionalism • Spurred by disasters such as Gauley Bridge Disaster (epidemic silicosis) • National Conference of Gov’t Industrial Hygienists (1938) • American Industrial Hygiene Association (1939) • Consensus approaches to control measures • New courses in occupational health launched at Harvard, Michigan, U.C, Columbia, Yale. • State laws (Department of Labor) ↑↑
Post WWII • American Academy of Occ Med formed, bridging academics/practitioners. • 1950s – worker and public interest waned • Landmark: 1969 – 1970 • Mine and Occupational Health & Safety Admin.
Enhanced Professionalization and Specialization • Occupational medicine • In nursing • In research • In industrial medicine • Diffusion into mainstream • Occupational research + occupational epidemiology • New paradigm linking work/working conditions and health away from clinical observation or toxicology experiments towards analysis of exposure
Enhanced Professionalization and Specialization (cont’d) • Assessment of workplace hazards, standards development, and control of worker injury and disease • Worker “Right to Know” • Development of databases • Formation of funded Centers throughout US.
Enhanced Professionalization and Specialization (cont’d) • Expansive view and move towards tasks associated with all environments, not just work • Environmental epidemiology
Tensions in the Field • Labor/Management/Professional • Inter-professional • Role of financial incentives
Future Hazards • Deep shifts in the public’s expectations and concerns regarding health • “Exuberant” fascination with the environment and concerns about health hazards, associated with environment, including work environment • Uncertain future • Soft money • Uneasy alliance with industry • Outsourcing/contract • Gov’t role, labor/health
How Safe and Healthy Are Our Workplaces (2010) • 130 million workers • 4,547 fatalities (3.5/100,000 FTE workers) • Down from 13k deaths/year • 3,063,400 injuries (4/100 workers) • Down from 10.9/100 workers in 1972 • Most dangerous jobs
Risk Management • OSHA – develops and enforces regulation • 10 regional offices + 90 local offices • 2700 inspectors • 573 million budget/year • 40k inspections/year • 2k whistleblower inspections • NIOSH – also formed by the OSH Act 1970 • Part of CDC • Research, information, education, training
Preparedness and Response embedding to a great extent within the Public Health System Process • A continuous cycle of gathering information, deciding, acting, evaluating • Public health is always evaluating the health of the community
Goals of Public Health During Emergency Response Two Roles Maintain Services Acute Response Continue to provide essential public health services Respond to public health needs created by the emergency
Categories of Disasters and Public Health Emergencies • Natural • Man-made, accidental • Man-made, deliberate • Complex • Sudden vs. slow onset
Common Features of Large Scale Disasters/Emergencies • Pose a threat to public health & safety • May disrupt social and economic infrastructure of the community • May require large scale mobilization of resources to manage consequences and prevent additional damage or injury to the citizens and society
Disasters: How common are they? (Source: Sunders, 2003)
Natural Emergencies/Disasters • Results of …ecological disruptions that exceed the ability of the community to adjust. • They are generally of sudden onset and can pose serious and immediate threats to public health.
Natural Disasters • Tornadoes • Large scale fires • Hurricanes/cyclones • Floods, sea surges, tsunamis, tidal waves • Snow storms • Volcanoes • Landslides • Severe air pollution (smog) • Heat waves • Epidemics • Earthquakes
Natural Disasters - Vulnerabilities • Low-lying coastal areas • Hurricane storm paths • Severe weather paths • Drought prone areas • Earthquake zones • Human development (over development and development in high risk areas) • Overpopulation
Vulnerable Populations • Overpopulated areas • Displaced persons • Elderly, children, disabled • Isolated, marginalized • Underprivileged
Technological Disasters • Explosions • Building collapse • Ecological contamination • Toxicological release • Industrial accidents • Nuclear plant or radiological accidents • Information technology failure • Pollution
Man-Made Disasters • Civil unrest • Forced migration • Population movements • Violence • Terrorism
Epidemics • Can be the disaster • Can follow other disasters: • Food/water borne illnesses (e.g., typhoid, cholera) • Vector borne illnesses (e.g., plague, malaria) • Diseases spread person to person (e.g., hepatitis A, shigellosis) • Diseases spread by respiratory route (e.g., measles, influenza) • Most preventable through: • Environmental sanitation • Disease surveillance • Preventive medicine (immunizations) • Treatment
Impact of Disasters • Death • Injury, including psychological injury • Destruction of property • Increased risk of communicable diseases • Damage to food/water supplies/systems • Population movement • Financial • Disruption of social order and functions
Disaster Outcomes • Injuries ↑ deaths • Explosions, typhoons, hurricanes, fires, tornadoes, epidemics • Deaths ↑ injuries • Landslides, avalanches, volcanoes, tidal waves, floods, earthquakes
Fundamental Aspects of Disaster Management • Disaster prevention • Disaster preparedness • Disaster response • Disaster mitigation • Rehabilitation • Reconstruction
Disaster Phases Hazard Mitigation Hazard Vulnerability Pre-Impact Peri-Impact Post-Impact