Literature DB >> 29735748

Greater coordination and harmonisation of European occupational cohorts is needed.

Michelle C Turner1,2,3,4, Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum5.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  epidemiology; exposure assessment; longitudinal studies

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29735748      PMCID: PMC6035485          DOI: 10.1136/oemed-2017-104955

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Occup Environ Med        ISSN: 1351-0711            Impact factor:   4.402


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Paid employment is an essential component of adult life and a major determinant of health. However, underemployment, long-term unemployment, poor working conditions and a lack of job security all negatively affect health, may hinder economic growth and further increase inequalities in the population. Occupational exposures are related to a significant proportion of diseases including cancer, cardiorespiratory diseases and musculoskeletal and mental disorders, among others.1 The demographic shift, with an ageing and increasingly diverse workforce, makes the impact of work on healthy ageing and disease prognosis a key issue. Rapid changes in employment patterns and exposures along with occupational restructuring and the increasing use of new technologies further increase the importance of research in occupational health.2 Europe currently has some of the most valuable occupational, industrial and population cohorts for aetiological research worldwide. However, relatively limited sample sizes of individual studies and lack of data harmonisation have meant that evidence of potential occupational hazards is often inconsistent and inconclusive, leading to delayed regulatory action. Better integration and coordination of these cohorts would improve the optimal exploitation of these resources, essential to underpin evidence-based interventions and policy. The benefits of large-scale co-ordination can be seen in several recent initiatives. MODERNET, a 2010–2014 European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) action, created a network to develop new techniques for surveillance of trends in occupational diseases and tracing new and emerging risks. Changes in incidence of occupational asthma, contact dermatitis, noise-induced hearing loss, carpal tunnel syndrome and upper limb musculoskeletal disorders were compared for the first time across diverse surveillance systems in 10 European countries.3 StanDerm (2012–2016) sought to create standards for the prevention and clinical management of occupational skin diseases.4 The Environmental Health Risks in European Birth Cohorts (ENRIECO)5 and Developing a Child Cohort Research Strategy for Europe (CHICOS) (www.chicosproject.eu) projects, and related birth cohort inventory (www.birthcohorts.net), also led to substantial advancements in child health research. The Network on the Coordination and Harmonisation of European Occupational Cohorts (OMEGA-NET) (http://www.cost.eu/COST_Actions/ca/CA16216) was recently created, currently with participants from 28 European countries and one international partner. OMEGA-NET is a 4-year action (2017–2021) supported by the EU-funded COST Association. It seeks to optimise the use of occupational, industrial and population cohorts at the European level by advancing (1) collaboration of cohorts with extensive contemporary information on employment and occupational exposures, (2) co-ordination and harmonisation of both new and existing occupational exposure assessment efforts, and (3) facilitation of an integrated research strategy for occupational health in Europe, with the aim to extend globally. More specifically, we seek to inventory numerous cohorts with occupational information in Europe (an initial evaluation indicates at least 63 major individual prospective and retrospective cohorts as well as several large record linkage studies with occupational information on over 30 million workers), implement an online interactive tool with detailed information on existing cohorts, facilitate work on harmonisation of existing occupational exposure and health outcome information and create and pilot-test new protocols for data collection, and connect scientific communities and relevant stakeholders. OMEGA-NET will focus initially on several research areas including, but not limited to (1) healthy ageing and work participation including that of chronically ill workers, (2) working hours with emphasis on shift work and alternate work hours, (3) employment patterns in the young with an emphasis on young employed women, (4) occupational skin diseases, (5) work-related psychosocial determinants of mental health and (6) precarious work. OMEGA-NET will enhance the scientific output from individual studies and facilitate pooled studies, data sharing, and transfer of tools and skills to make greater and more efficient use of existing cohorts. It will also provide a unique resource for hypothesis-driven research, and further support recent calls for the increased use of prospective cohorts in aetiological research on workplace exposures.6 Through facilitating standardisation of both new and existing data, OMEGA-NET will provide an opportunity to investigate the causes of variability in research findings between studies and eventually address those related to methodological inconsistencies. By combining data from multiple cohorts, it may be possible to address research questions with greater statistical power, particularly when looking at interactions between multiple risk factors, subgroup effects and rare exposures/outcomes, and exploit between-countries differences (see for example the International Nuclear Workers Study,7 the AGRICOH Consortium of Agricultural Cohorts8 and the Individual-Participant Data Meta-Analysis in Working Populations consortium9). It can also contribute to evaluating evidence and classifying carcinogens.10 Exposure assessment will be facilitated through standardised and transparent approaches in both new and existing studies. Established large European population-based cohorts have so far been under-used for occupational epidemiology, mainly due to the lack of exposure information, including comprehensive job-exposure matrices (JEMs). Occupational exposure assessment tools, such as existing databases and JEMs, will be inventoried and brought together to build an open exposure assessment resource. Where applicable, JEMs will be compared and validated against available exposure data. It is important to note, however, that coordination and harmonisation is not without challenges, often requiring lengthy processes of comparison, validation, data reduction and compromise, the demands of which should not be understated.11 12 Differences between studies may also be greater than originally anticipated and careful interpretation of results required.7 8 12 Although we will focus on selected high priority exposure/outcome variables of interest, time and resources will likely impact the work. Other potential limitations may include the inventory of occupational cohorts that are either small, poorly documented, based in private industry or historical; however, we seek primarily to improve coordination among active, or potentially active, cohorts for future use. A balance will also be sought in terms of the amount of data captured in the inventory to maximise its usefulness while minimising the burden of data collected from each cohort. Although new protocols for data collection will be prepared and disseminated, their use will depend on implementation in individual cohorts. Overall, OMEGA-NET will provide a foundation for an enhanced evidence base for the identification of health risks and gains related to occupation and employment and strengthened occupational health policies in Europe. Substantial advancements in occupational health research will be realised with a coordinated European, as well as international, approach to research and dissemination.
  10 in total

1.  Cohort Profile: The International Nuclear Workers Study (INWORKS).

Authors:  Ghassan B Hamra; David B Richardson; Elisabeth Cardis; Robert D Daniels; Michael Gillies; Jacqueline A O'Hagan; Richard Haylock; Dominique Laurier; Klervi Leuraud; Monika Moissonnier; Mary Schubauer-Berigan; Isabelle Thierry-Chef; Ausrele Kesminiene
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2015-07-06       Impact factor: 7.196

2.  Ensuring comparability of benzene exposure estimates across three nested case-control studies in the petroleum industry in support of a pooled epidemiological analysis.

Authors:  D C Glass; T W Armstrong; E D Pearlman; D K Verma; A R Schnatter; L Rushton
Journal:  Chem Biol Interact       Date:  2009-11-13       Impact factor: 5.192

3.  Trends in incidence of occupational asthma, contact dermatitis, noise-induced hearing loss, carpal tunnel syndrome and upper limb musculoskeletal disorders in European countries from 2000 to 2012.

Authors:  S Jill Stocks; Roseanne McNamee; Henk F van der Molen; Christophe Paris; Pavel Urban; Giuseppe Campo; Riitta Sauni; Begoña Martínez Jarreta; Madeleine Valenty; Lode Godderis; David Miedinger; Pascal Jacquetin; Hans M Gravseth; Vincent Bonneterre; Maylis Telle-Lamberton; Lynda Bensefa-Colas; Serge Faye; Godewina Mylle; Axel Wannag; Yogindra Samant; Teake Pal; Stefan Scholz-Odermatt; Adriano Papale; Martijn Schouteden; Claudio Colosio; Stefano Mattioli; Raymond Agius
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2015-01-09       Impact factor: 4.402

4.  Assessment of occupational exposure to pesticides in a pooled analysis of agricultural cohorts within the AGRICOH consortium.

Authors:  Maartje Brouwer; Leah Schinasi; Laura E Beane Freeman; Isabelle Baldi; Pierre Lebailly; Gilles Ferro; Karl-Christian Nordby; Joachim Schüz; Maria E Leon; Hans Kromhout
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2016-03-23       Impact factor: 4.402

5.  Minimum standards on prevention, diagnosis and treatment of occupational and work-related skin diseases in Europe - position paper of the COST Action StanDerm (TD 1206).

Authors:  J H Alfonso; A Bauer; L Bensefa-Colas; A Boman; M Bubas; L Constandt; M N Crepy; M Goncalo; J Macan; V Mahler; D Mijakoski; J M Ramada Rodilla; T Rustemeyer; P Spring; S M John; W Uter; M Wilkinson; A M Giménez-Arnau
Journal:  J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 6.166

6.  Investing in prospective cohorts for etiologic study of occupational exposures.

Authors:  A Blair; C J Hines; K W Thomas; M C R Alavanja; L E Beane Freeman; J A Hoppin; F Kamel; C F Lynch; J H Lubin; D T Silverman; E Whelan; S H Zahm; D P Sandler
Journal:  Am J Ind Med       Date:  2015-02       Impact factor: 2.214

7.  Developing a pooled job physical exposure data set from multiple independent studies: an example of a consortium study of carpal tunnel syndrome.

Authors:  Stephen S Bao; Jay M Kapellusch; Arun Garg; Barbara A Silverstein; Carisa Harris-Adamson; Susan E Burt; Ann Marie Dale; Bradley A Evanoff; Frederic E Gerr; Kurt T Hegmann; Linda A Merlino; Matthew S Thiese; David M Rempel
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2014-12-10       Impact factor: 4.402

Review 8.  European birth cohorts for environmental health research.

Authors:  Martine Vrijheid; Maribel Casas; Anna Bergström; Amanda Carmichael; Sylvaine Cordier; Merete Eggesbø; Esben Eller; Maria P Fantini; Mariana F Fernández; Ana Fernández-Somoano; Ulrike Gehring; Regina Grazuleviciene; Cynthia Hohmann; Anne M Karvonen; Thomas Keil; Manolis Kogevinas; Gudrun Koppen; Ursula Krämer; Claudia E Kuehni; Per Magnus; Renata Majewska; Anne-Marie Nybo Andersen; Evridiki Patelarou; Maria Skaalum Petersen; Frank H Pierik; Kinga Polanska; Daniela Porta; Lorenzo Richiardi; Ana Cristina Santos; Rémy Slama; Radim J Sram; Carel Thijs; Christina Tischer; Gunnar Toft; Tomáš Trnovec; Stephanie Vandentorren; Tanja G M Vrijkotte; Michael Wilhelm; John Wright; Mark Nieuwenhuijsen
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2011-08-29       Impact factor: 9.031

Review 9.  Effort-Reward Imbalance at Work and Incident Coronary Heart Disease: A Multicohort Study of 90,164 Individuals.

Authors:  Nico Dragano; Johannes Siegrist; Solja T Nyberg; Thorsten Lunau; Eleonor I Fransson; Lars Alfredsson; Jakob B Bjorner; Marianne Borritz; Hermann Burr; Raimund Erbel; Göran Fahlén; Marcel Goldberg; Mark Hamer; Katriina Heikkilä; Karl-Heinz Jöckel; Anders Knutsson; Ida E H Madsen; Martin L Nielsen; Maria Nordin; Tuula Oksanen; Jan H Pejtersen; Jaana Pentti; Reiner Rugulies; Paula Salo; Jürgen Schupp; Archana Singh-Manoux; Andrew Steptoe; Töres Theorell; Jussi Vahtera; Peter J M Westerholm; Hugo Westerlund; Marianna Virtanen; Marie Zins; G David Batty; Mika Kivimäki
Journal:  Epidemiology       Date:  2017-07       Impact factor: 4.822

10.  Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 84 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks, 1990-2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016.

Authors: 
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2017-09-16       Impact factor: 79.321

  10 in total
  12 in total

1.  Development of Harmonized COVID-19 Occupational Questionnaires.

Authors:  Vivi Schlünssen; Jean Baptist du Prel; Martie van Tongeren; Lode Godderis; Michelle C Turner; Damien McElvenny
Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health       Date:  2022-07-10       Impact factor: 2.779

2.  Harmonized definition of occupational burnout: A systematic review, semantic analysis, and Delphi consensus in 29 countries.

Authors:  Irina Guseva Canu; Sandy Carla Marca; Francesca Dell'Oro; Ádám Balázs; Enrico Bergamaschi; Christine Besse; Renzo Bianchi; Jovanka Bislimovska; Adrijana Koscec Bjelajac; Merete Bugge; Carmen Iliana Busneag; Çiğdem Çağlayan; Mariana Cernițanu; Cristiana Costa Pereira; Nataša Dernovšček Hafner; Nadia Droz; Maija Eglite; Lode Godderis; Harald Gündel; Jari J Hakanen; Raluca Maria Iordache; Imane Khireddine-Medouni; Sibel Kiran; Francesca Larese-Filon; Catherine Lazor-Blanchet; Patrick Légeron; Tom Loney; Nicole Majery; Eda Merisalu; Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum; Laurent Michaud; Dragan Mijakoski; Jordan Minov; Alberto Modenese; Marija Molan; Henk van der Molen; Evangelia Nena; Dusan Nolimal; Marina Otelea; Elisabeta Pletea; Nurka Pranjic; David Rebergen; Jelena Reste; Eva Schernhammer; Anny Wahlen
Journal:  Scand J Work Environ Health       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 5.024

3.  The OMEGA-NET International Inventory of Occupational Cohorts.

Authors:  Manolis Kogevinas; Vivi Schlünssen; Ingrid S Mehlum; Michelle C Turner
Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health       Date:  2020-07-01       Impact factor: 2.179

4.  Burnout syndrome in Europe: towards a harmonized approach in occupational health practice and research.

Authors:  Irina Guseva Canu; Olivia Mesot; Christina Györkös; Zakia Mediouni; Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum; Merete Drevvatne Bugge
Journal:  Ind Health       Date:  2019-02-27       Impact factor: 2.179

Review 5.  Diagnostic criteria for musculoskeletal disorders for use in occupational healthcare or research: a scoping review of consensus- and synthesised-based case definitions.

Authors:  Henk F van der Molen; Steven Visser; Jose Hernán Alfonso; Stefania Curti; Stefano Mattioli; David Rempel; Yves Roquelaure; P Paul F M Kuijer; Sietske J Tamminga
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 2.362

6.  Towards harmonisation of case definitions for eight work-related musculoskeletal disorders - an international multi-disciplinary Delphi study.

Authors:  Sietske J Tamminga; P Paul F M Kuijer; Kathryn Badarin; Jose Hernán Alfonso; Joana Amaro; Stefania Curti; Irina Guseva Canu; Stefano Mattioli; Ingrid S Mehlum; David Rempel; Yves Roquelaure; Steven Visser; Henk F van der Molen
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2021-12-04       Impact factor: 2.362

7.  Working life, health and well-being of parents: a joint effort to uncover hidden treasures in European birth cohorts.

Authors:  Monica Ubalde-Lopez; Tina Garani-Papadatos; Ghislaine Scelo; Maribel Casas; Claudia Lissåker; Susan Peters; Ellen Aagaard Nohr; Maria Albin; Raquel Lucas; Kyriaki Papantoniou; Kinga Polańska; Cecilia H Ramlau-Hansen; Jelena Šarac; Jenny Selander; Helena Skröder; Elena Vasileiou; Manolis Kogevinas; Ute Bültmann; Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum; Milena Maule
Journal:  Scand J Work Environ Health       Date:  2021-08-25       Impact factor: 5.024

8.  How to improve the assessment of the impact of occupational diseases at a national level? The Netherlands as an example.

Authors:  Henk F van der Molen; Carel Tj Hulshof; P Paul Fm Kuijer
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2018-10-08       Impact factor: 4.402

9.  Occupational COVID-19: what can be learned from notifications of occupational diseases?

Authors:  Henk F van der Molen; Sanja Kezic; Steven Visser; Gerda de Groene; Jaap Maas; Astrid de Wind; Sietske Tamminga
Journal:  Occup Environ Med       Date:  2020-11-06       Impact factor: 4.402

10.  Lung Cancer Mortality in the Swiss Working Population: The Effect of Occupational and Non-Occupational Factors.

Authors:  Nicolas Bovio; Pascal Wild; Irina Guseva Canu
Journal:  J Occup Environ Med       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 2.162

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