Ohlander Johan, Kromhout Hans, van Tongeren Martie
Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2020 Mar 9;8:67. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.00067. eCollection 2020.
Reducing occupational ill-health from chemical and biological agents is realized primarily through the mitigation and elimination of hazardous exposures. Despite evidence of declining exposure in European and North-American workplaces, comprehensive studies of the effectiveness of workplace interventions for reducing hazardous exposure and associated work-related ill-health seem rare. We reviewed occupational intervention studies targeting exposure to chemical and biological agents, and determined trends in frequency and quality of such studies. We searched Embase, Medline, and Web of Science for peer-reviewed original articles on occupational intervention studies published 1960-2019, aimed at reducing workers' exposure to dusts, gases, fumes, or liquids of chemical, biological, or mineral nature, or workers' risks for associated health outcomes. The frequency of articles, intervention types, intervention endpoints, and study quality of published intervention studies between 1960 and 2019 and according to 10-year intervals were analyzed. Of 3,663 retrieved articles, 146 intervention studies were identified and reviewed, of which 63 concerned control measures, 43 behavioral change, 28 use of personal protective equipment, and 12 workplace policies. Intervention endpoints were occupational exposures (73%), health outcomes (22%), and a combination of both (5%). Of reviewed studies, 38% involved a control group, 16% randomized the intervention, 86% were planned interventions, and 86% compared exposure or health outcomes pre and post intervention. Over time the number of intervention studies identified in this search increased from none during 1960-1969 to ~60 during 2000-2009 and 2010-2019, respectively. The study quality improved over time, with no studies during 1960-1989 that complied with the highest quality criteria. During 2000-2009 and 2010-2019 16 and 12% of studies, respectively, were judged to be of highest quality. Despite an improvement over the last six decades in the frequency and quality of intervention studies targeting exposure to chemicals and biological agents, the absolute number of intervention studies remains low, particularly when considering only high quality studies. Occupational exposure to chemical and biological agents is still causing excessive disease in workforces worldwide. To reduce occupational ill-health caused by these exposures, it is important to expand the evidence on (cost-)effectiveness and transferability of interventions to reduce exposure and health effects.
减少化学和生物制剂导致的职业健康问题主要通过减轻和消除有害暴露来实现。尽管有证据表明欧洲和北美工作场所的暴露水平在下降,但针对减少有害暴露及相关职业健康问题的工作场所干预措施有效性的全面研究似乎很少。我们回顾了针对化学和生物制剂暴露的职业干预研究,并确定了此类研究的频率和质量趋势。我们在Embase、Medline和科学网中搜索了1960年至2019年发表的关于职业干预研究的同行评审原创文章,这些研究旨在减少工人接触化学、生物或矿物性质的粉尘、气体、烟雾或液体,或减少工人面临相关健康后果的风险。分析了1960年至2019年期间按10年间隔划分的已发表干预研究的文章频率、干预类型、干预终点和研究质量。在检索到的3663篇文章中,确定并回顾了146项干预研究,其中63项涉及控制措施,43项涉及行为改变,28项涉及个人防护设备的使用,12项涉及工作场所政策。干预终点为职业暴露(73%)、健康结果(22%)以及两者的结合(5%)。在已审查的研究中,38%涉及对照组,16%对干预进行了随机分组,86%为计划性干预,86%比较了干预前后的暴露或健康结果。随着时间的推移,此次检索中确定的干预研究数量从1960 - 1969年期间的零增加到2000 - 2009年和2010 - 2019年期间分别约为60项。研究质量随时间有所提高,1960 - 1989年期间没有研究符合最高质量标准。在2000 - 2009年和2010 - 2019年期间,分别有16%和12%的研究被判定为最高质量。尽管在过去六十年中,针对化学和生物制剂暴露的干预研究在频率和质量方面有所改善,但干预研究的绝对数量仍然较低,特别是仅考虑高质量研究时。职业接触化学和生物制剂仍在全球劳动力中导致过多疾病。为了减少这些暴露导致的职业健康问题,扩大关于减少暴露和健康影响的干预措施(成本 - )效益和可转移性的证据非常重要。