Estimating occupational disease burden: a way forward

Author:

Cherrie John W1ORCID,van Tongeren Martie2ORCID,Kromhout Hans3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Department, Institute of Occupational Medicine, Edinburgh and Institute of Biological Chemistry, Biophysics and Bioengineering, Heriot-Watt University , Edinburgh EH14 4AP , United Kingdom

2. Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health, University of Manchester , Manchester M13 9PL , United Kingdom

3. Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht University , 3584 CM Utrecht , The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Estimates of occupational disease burden provide important information on which effective policy and regulations can be developed. However, there is no direct way that these data can be obtained, and most burden estimates are derived by merging different data from diverse sources to synthesize estimates of the number of people made ill or who have died from workplace exposures. In recent years, several research groups have published estimates of occupational health burden at national or global scales; these are not always consistent. The World Health Organisation and the International Labour Organisation have taken on the task of producing occupational disease burden estimates for several workplace agents, which we assume are to be seen as the definitive global, regional, and national data. In this commentary, we critique the WHO/ILO approach for their estimates of the non-melanoma skin cancer burden from solar ultraviolet radiation and some of their results for hazardous particulates. We provide recommendations for researchers undertaking occupational burden estimates that they should report along with their data.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference22 articles.

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3. Workplace exposure to UV radiation and strategies to minimize cancer risk;Cherrie;Br Med Bull,2022

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