TY - JOUR
T1 - A regional occupational medicine service
T2 - Qualitative and quantitative assessment
AU - Carel, Rafael S.
AU - Kazanovitch, Lev
AU - Smirnov, Valantine
AU - Brofman, Ludmila
AU - Mcclure, Nancy L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Received from the Department of Occupational Medicine, Division of Community Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel. Supported in partby a grant from the Israel Public Council for Soviet Jewry, Senior Scientists' Program. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Rafael S. Carel, MD, Division of Community Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel.
PY - 1996/1/1
Y1 - 1996/1/1
N2 - A quantitative description of a regional occupational medicine system, serving some 200,000 workers in a broad spectrum of occupations, is given. The main activities of the service - pre-employment, medical surveillance, and fitness-to-work examinations - are presented in quantitative terms. Approximately 27,000 examinations are performed annually, of which about 50% require biological monitoring for a specific occupational exposure, 35% are fitness-for-work examinations, and 15% are pre-employment examinations. The main abnormal findings identified by fitness examinations involved the musculoskeletal (25%), cardiovascular (13%), or upper respiratory, pulmonary, and neurologic systems (3% each). Among surveillance examinations, the most frequently identified pathology is phonal trauma (11%). The three types of examinations are looked at with respect to rates of abnormal findings over a one-year period, compared with the mean rate of abnormal findings over the preceding five-year period, and future trends are extrapolated. The implications regarding assessment of resource allocation, appropriate budgeting, and personnel recruitment and training, as well as planning of worker safety and health maintenance programs, are noted. The authors conclude that ongoing quantitative analysis of the activities of a regional occupational medicine service is mandatory for quality assurance and future planning responsive to the dynamic needs of the target workforce.
AB - A quantitative description of a regional occupational medicine system, serving some 200,000 workers in a broad spectrum of occupations, is given. The main activities of the service - pre-employment, medical surveillance, and fitness-to-work examinations - are presented in quantitative terms. Approximately 27,000 examinations are performed annually, of which about 50% require biological monitoring for a specific occupational exposure, 35% are fitness-for-work examinations, and 15% are pre-employment examinations. The main abnormal findings identified by fitness examinations involved the musculoskeletal (25%), cardiovascular (13%), or upper respiratory, pulmonary, and neurologic systems (3% each). Among surveillance examinations, the most frequently identified pathology is phonal trauma (11%). The three types of examinations are looked at with respect to rates of abnormal findings over a one-year period, compared with the mean rate of abnormal findings over the preceding five-year period, and future trends are extrapolated. The implications regarding assessment of resource allocation, appropriate budgeting, and personnel recruitment and training, as well as planning of worker safety and health maintenance programs, are noted. The authors conclude that ongoing quantitative analysis of the activities of a regional occupational medicine service is mandatory for quality assurance and future planning responsive to the dynamic needs of the target workforce.
KW - Fitness-for-work examinations
KW - Occupational health service
KW - Pre-employment
KW - Surveillance examinations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0002722126&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1179/oeh.1996.2.4.305
DO - 10.1179/oeh.1996.2.4.305
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0002722126
SN - 1077-3525
VL - 2
SP - 305
EP - 310
JO - International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health
JF - International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health
IS - 4
ER -