Literature DB >> 24180083

Post-occupational health surveillance of asbestos workers.

G Mastrangelo1, G Marangi, Maria Nicoletta Ballarin, E Bellini, Nicoletta De Marzo, Margit Eder, A Finchi, F Gioffrè, Daniela Marcolina, Gianna Tessadri, Federica Zannol, Ilaria Altafini, Elena Belluso, Sara Zaina, R Agnesi, L Scoizzato, U Fedeli, L Cegolon, F Valentini, L Marchiori.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Italian law requires an extensive health surveillance of workers after cessation of their employment status in the case of occupational exposure to carcinogens, including asbestos. Nonetheless, Italian law does not specify the timeframe of these clinical checks, nor who has financial and organizational responsibility for this surveillance. A literature search confirmed a lack of consensus around the objectives and methods to follow up workers with past occupational exposure to asbestos.
OBJECTIVES: To develop an updated evidence-based methodology for an appropriate health surveillance programme.
METHODS: We present an overview of the field experience developed by the Veneto Region from 2000 to 2011, and new studies that could contribute to establishing a national policy for the medical surveillance of workers with past asbestos exposure.
RESULTS: There were three specific topics: (1) definition of a reliable method to identify asbestos workers (through multiple sources and procedures that meet current confidentiality regulations); (2) detection of asbestos fibres in biological media (to support the etiological diagnosis of asbestos-related diseases); (3) creation of a national protocol of health surveillance (through the assessment of policies developed by other Regions in this field, and recruiting from these regions a cohort of past-exposed workers: the epidemiological study should offer relevant suggestions for specific surveillance approaches, based on either estimated cumulative asbestos exposure or detection of x-ray patterns of pleural plaques and/or asbestosis).
CONCLUSIONS: These studies will support the Regions in setting up health care policies directed at workers with past asbestos exposure.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24180083

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Lav        ISSN: 0025-7818            Impact factor:   1.275


  5 in total

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Authors:  Min Yu; Yixiao Zhang; Zhaoqiang Jiang; Junqiang Chen; Lihong Liu; Jianlin Lou; Xing Zhang
Journal:  Environ Health Prev Med       Date:  2015-07-19       Impact factor: 3.674

2.  Global DNA hypomethylation has no impact on lung function or serum inflammatory and fibrosis cytokines in asbestos-exposed population.

Authors:  Min Yu; Jianlin Lou; Hailing Xia; Min Zhang; Yixiao Zhang; Junqiang Chen; Xing Zhang; Shibo Ying; Lijin Zhu; Lihong Liu; Guang Jia
Journal:  Int Arch Occup Environ Health       Date:  2017-01-19       Impact factor: 3.015

3.  Asbestos Ban in Italy: A Major Milestone, Not the Final Cut.

Authors:  Daniela Marsili; Alessia Angelini; Caterina Bruno; Marisa Corfiati; Alessandro Marinaccio; Stefano Silvestri; Amerigo Zona; Pietro Comba
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4.  Medical follow-up of workers exposed to lung carcinogens: French evidence-based and pragmatic recommendations.

Authors:  Fleur Delva; Jacques Margery; François Laurent; Karine Petitprez; Jean-Claude Pairon
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2017-02-14       Impact factor: 3.295

5.  Mortality in a cohort of asbestos-exposed workers undergoing health surveillance.

Authors:  Fabiano Barbiero; Tina Zanin; Federica Edith Pisa; Anica Casetta; Valentina Rosolen; Manuela Giangreco; Corrado Negro; Massimo Bovenzi; Fabio Barbone
Journal:  Med Lav       Date:  2018-02-06       Impact factor: 1.275

  5 in total

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