| Literature DB >> 33493250 |
Heinrich Dickel1, Annette Kuehn2, Beate Dickel3, Andrea Bauer4, Detlef Becker5, Manigé Fartasch6, Michael Haeberle7, Swen Malte John8, Vera Mahler9, Christoph Skudlik8, Elke Weisshaar10, Thomas Werfel11, Johannes Geier12, Thomas Ludwig Diepgen13,14.
Abstract
Fish, crustaceans, and mollusks are among the most potent allergenic foods of animal origin and are thus important triggers of work-related immediate-food allergies. In Germany, work-related seafood allergies are of great importance in the fishing and processing industries as well as in the areas of food preparation, food control, and food sales. There is no causal therapy of seafood allergy, only the strict and lifelong avoidance of allergens remains. The following recommendations serve to assess the impact of a seafood allergy with regard to the work opportunities ended by it for the assessment of the reduction of earning capacity (MdE (German for Minderung der Erwerbsfähigkeit)) in the context of the occupational disease number 5101 of the Annex to the German regulation for occupational diseases. As a special feature of work-related seafood allergy with regard to insurance law aspects, it must be taken into account that there is a potential risk of systemic reaction with subsequent multi-organ involvement. For the estimation of MdE in the general labor market, the impact of a seafood allergy can therefore be assessed, depending on its clinical severity, as generally "mild" to "severe" in justified individual cases. © Dustri-Verlag Dr. K. Feistle.Entities:
Keywords: BK No. 5101; crustaceans; fish; immediate-type allergy; mollusks; occupational dermatology; reduction of earning capacity; seafood; shellfish
Year: 2021 PMID: 33493250 PMCID: PMC7814778 DOI: 10.5414/AL0DB380E
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergol Select ISSN: 2512-8957