Para-occupational exposure to chemical substances: a systematic review
Author:
Ramezanifar Soleiman1ORCID, Azimian Afsane1ORCID, khadiv Elahe1ORCID, Naziri Seyed Husein1ORCID, Gharari Noradin23ORCID, Fazlzadeh Mehdi24ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Occupational Health and Safety Engineering , School of Public Health and Safety, Shahid Behest University of Medical Sciences , Tehran , Iran 2. Lung Diseases Research Center, Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Ardabil , Iran 3. Department of Occupational Health , School of Health, Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Ardabil , Iran 4. Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Ardabil University of Medical Sciences , Tehran , Iran
Abstract
Abstract
Today, many health problems related to work have overshadowed workers and their families. In the meantime, chemicals are among the risk factors that have created many problems due to para-occupational exposure. In para-occupational exposures, family members are exposed to work pollutants transferred to the home environment. This study was conducted to investigate para-occupational exposure to chemicals. To conduct this systematic review, databases such as “Web of Science”, “Google Scholar”, “Scopus”, and “SID” were used. Relevant articles in these databases were extracted by searching keywords such as “take-home exposure”, “para-occupational exposure”, and “chemicals” from 2000 to 2022. To extract the required data, all parts of the articles were reviewed following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA 2020). Among the 44 identified articles, 23 were selected as final articles, of which 10 were related to agriculture workers and their families, and 13 were related to other occupations. These studies mainly investigated para-occupational exposure to pesticides (14 studies) and metals (four studies). Also, contaminated work clothes, the washing place of contaminated clothes, and storage of working clothes, equipment, and chemicals were proposed as the main routes of contamination transmission. As a result of these para-occupational exposures, problems like neuro-behavioral disorders in children, end-stage renal disease, black gingival borders, and autism spectrum disorder were created or aggravated. Limiting the transmission routes and taking measures such as training and providing facilities like devoting places for washing and storing clothes in the workplaces can decrease this type of exposure.
Funder
Lung Diseases Research Center, Ardabil University of Medical Sciences
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pollution,Health (social science)
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