| Literature DB >> 23374107 |
A Adisesh1, E Robinson, P J Nicholson, D Sen, M Wilkinson.
Abstract
The diagnosis of occupational contact dermatitis (OCD) and occupational contact urticaria (OCU) is a process that involves fastidious clinical and occupational history taking, clinical examination, patch testing and skin-prick testing. A temporal relationship of work and/or the presence of a rash on the hands only raises suspicion of an occupational cause, and does not necessarily confirm an occupational causation. The identification of allergy by patch or prick tests is a major objective, as exclusion of an offending allergen from the environment can contribute to clinical recovery in the individual worker and avoidance of new cases of disease. This can be a complex process where allergens and irritants, and therefore allergic and irritant contact dermatitis, may coexist. This article provides guidance to healthcare professionals dealing with workers exposed to agents that potentially cause OCD and OCU. Specifically it aims to summarize the 2010 British Occupational Health Research Foundation (BOHRF) systematic review, and also to help practitioners translate the BOHRF guideline into clinical practice. As such, it aims to be of value to physicians and nurses based in primary and secondary care, as well as occupational health and public health clinicians. It is hoped that it will also be of value to employers, interested workers and those with responsibility for workplace standards, such as health and safety representatives. Note that it is not intended, nor should it be taken to imply, that these standards of care override existing statutory and legal obligations. Duties under the U.K. Health and Safety at Work Act 1974, the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002, the Equality Act 2010 and other relevant legislation and guidance must be given due consideration, as should laws relevant to other countries.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23374107 PMCID: PMC3734701 DOI: 10.1111/bjd.12256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Dermatol ISSN: 0007-0963 Impact factor: 9.302
Key recommendations from the British Occupational Health Research Foundation (BOHRF) Systematic Review: Occupational Contact Dermatitis and Urticaria
| Employers and their health and safety personnel should: | |
| 1 | Implement programmes to remove or reduce exposure to agents that cause OCD and OCU |
| 2 | Provide appropriate gloves and cotton liners where the risk of developing OCD or OCU cannot be eliminated by removing exposure to its causes |
| 3 | Make after-work (conditioning) creams readily available in the workplace and encourage workers to use them regularly |
| 4 | Do not promote the use of prework (barrier) creams, as this may confer on workers a false sense of security and encourage them to be complacent in following more effective preventative measures |
| 5 | Provide workers with appropriate health and safety information and training |
| 6 | Ensure that workers who develop OCD or OCU are properly assessed by a physician who has expertise in occupational skin disease for recommendations regarding appropriate workplace adjustments |
| Health practitioners should: | |
| 7 | Ask a worker who has been offered a job that will expose them to causes of OCD if they have a personal history of dermatitis, particularly in adulthood, and advise them of their increased risk, and care for and protect their skin |
| 8 | Ask the worker who has been offered a job that will expose them to causes of OCU if they have a personal history of atopy and advise them of their increased risk, and care for and protect their skin |
| 9 | Take a full occupational history whenever someone of working age presents with a skin rash, asking about their job, the materials with which they work, the location of the rash and any temporal relationship with work |
| 10 | Arrange for a diagnosis of OCD or OCU to be confirmed objectively (patch tests and/or skin-prick tests) and not on the basis of a compatible history alone because of the implications for future employment |
OCD, occupational contact dermatitis; OCU, occupational contact urticaria. Each recommendation was formed from a number of evidence-based statements, graded using both the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidance Network system and the Royal College of General Practitioners' 3-star system (modified in 2008 by the Swedish Council on Technology Assessment in Health Care report for scientific studies). Full details of the rating systems used and the grades of evidence applied to each statement are available in the BOHRF review.2
Fig. 1Patient journey schematic for workers with occupational skin disease (occupational contact dermatitis and occupational contact urticaria). GP, general practitioner; IHR, ill-health retirement; RIDDOR, Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995; OH, occupational health.
Reporting requirements for occupational dermatitis under Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995 (RIDDOR)
| HSE32. RIDDOR – Information for doctors | |
|---|---|
| Reportable diseases from Schedule 3 of the regulations | |
| Occupational diseases – conditions due to substances | |
| Section 45: occupational dermatitis | |
| Activity: work involving exposure to any of the following agents | |
| a | Epoxy resin systems |
| b | Formaldehyde and its resins |
| c | Metalworking fluids |
| d | Chromate (hexavalent and derived from trivalent chromium) |
| e | Cement, plaster or concrete |
| f | Acrylates and methacrylates |
| g | Colophony (rosin) and its modified products |
| h | Glutaraldehyde |
| i | Mercaptobenzothiazole, thiurams, substituted paraphenylenediamines and related rubber-processing chemicals |
| j | Biocides, antibacterials, preservatives or disinfectants |
| k | Organic solvents |
| l | Antibiotics and other pharmaceuticals and therapeutic agents |
| m | Strong acids, strong alkalis, strong solutions (e.g. brine) and oxidizing agents including domestic bleach or reducing agents |
| n | Hairdressing products including in particular dyes, shampoos, bleaches and permanent waving solutions |
| o | Soaps and detergents |
| p | Plants and plant-derived material including in particular the daffodil, tulip and chrysanthemum families, the parsley family (carrots, parsnips, parsley and celery), garlic and onion, hardwoods and the pine family |
| q | Fish, shellfish or meat |
| r | Sugar or flour |
| s | Any other known irritant or sensitizing agent including in particular any chemical bearing the warning ‘may cause sensitization by skin contact’ or ‘irritating to the skin’ |
Note that urticaria is not listed in the RIDDOR guidance.
Fig. 2Health surveillance for occupational dermatitis. GP, general practitioner; RIDDOR, Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995. *This may be performed by direct inspection and/or by questionnaire. †A qualified person is a suitably qualified medical practitioner or occupational health nurse.
Summary: standards of care for occupational contact dermatitis (OCD) and occupational contact urticaria (OCU)
| 1 | There should be no use of prework creams labelled or promoted as ‘barrier creams’ |
| 2 | Skin-conditioning creams should be available at hand-washing areas and in other appropriate places. Training and guidance in the application of skin-conditioning creams should be provided |
| 3 | Arrangements for access to a physician who has expertise in occupational skin disease should be in place for initial diagnosis and recommendations regarding appropriate workplace adjustments, together with subsequent investigation by patch or prick testing if appropriate |
| 4 | Employers have legal duties to assess the health risks from skin exposure to hazardous substances at work. They should prevent or, where this is not reasonably practicable, adequately control exposure to the hazards by using and maintaining suitable controls |
| 5 | Where adequate control of exposure cannot be achieved by other means, suitable personal protective equipment should be provided in combination with other measures. The use of gloves must take into account appropriate selection and training on glove usage, including the provision of cotton liners |
| 6 | Information and training aimed at improving and maintaining skin health should be provided to employees at risk of developing OCD or OCU at the time of employment and regularly thereafter |
| 7 | Whenever someone of working age presents with a skin rash the clinical records should contain a full clinical and occupational history asking about their job, the materials with which they work, the location of the rash and any temporal relationship with work |
| 8 | The diagnosis of suspected occupational skin disease (OCD or OCU) should include objective patch or prick testing where (i) the condition has not improved 3 months after initial advice, and (ii) a contact allergy is suspected or there are implications for fitness to work, such as altered employment, loss of job or complete change of employment |
| 9 | Where a worker has been offered a job that will expose them to causes of OCD, the clinical records should indicate if they have a personal history of dermatitis, particularly in adulthood, and record advice given to them of their increased risk, and how to care for and protect their skin |
| 10 | Where a worker has been offered a job that will expose them to causes of OCU, the clinical records should indicate if they have a personal history of atopy, and record advice given to them of their increased risk, and how to care for and protect their skin |