This is the first textbook that makes workplace health surveillance accessible to a broad audience. Step-by-step, it shows how to establish or improve a surveillance system. The reader learns about defining objectives, seeking organizational support, forming a surveillance workgroup, collecting data, calculating basic injury and illness statistics, designing databases, analyzing and interpreting surveillance data, setting priorities, making protocols for follow-up and casemanagement, marketing results and giving feedback, and evaluating surveillance systems. Links are emphasized between surveillance and workplace follow-up, community-based intervention programs, cost-benefit analysis, and other prevention activities. Readers get a solid foundation of epidemiologic conceptsreinforced by examples that use simple arithmetic. Leading practitioners from government, business, and unions illustrate the surveillance of injuries, lead poisoning, pesticide illness, cumulative trauma disorders, asthma, noise-induced hearing loss, silicosis, cancer, and chemical and physical hazards. Non-traditional data sources are examined, including health and disability insurance, hospital discharge, and poison control centers. Disability surveillance, return-to-work, and thequality/effectiveness of health services also are explored. Surveillance is shown to be an action-oriented tool for decision-making that is the key to a successful health and safety program.
Part I Principles; Introduction; Getting Organized; Data Collecting; Measuring Injury and Disease Frequency; Comparing Rates of Injury and Disease; Protocols for Case Reporting and Follow-up; Analysis and Interpretation; Feedback; Evaluation and Planning; Surveillance and the Design of Occupational Health Information Systems; Part II Case Studies; Lead Poisoning / Elevated Blood Lead; Acute Pesticide Poisoning; Carpal Tunnel Syndrome; Silicosis; Noise-Induced Hearing Loss; Asthma; Injury Surveillance at Ford Motor Company; Health and Disability Insurance; Cancer Mortality Surveillance; Fatal Injury Surveillance; Exposure Surveillance for Chemical and Physical Hazards; Hospital Discharge Data; Poison Control Centers; Workers Compensation Information Systems; Closing the Loop: Impact of a Lead Poisoning Prevention Project; Frontiers of Occupational Health Surveillance;
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