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1 exposure are unknown and do not appear to be occupational.
2 es, 2.0-4.5), 622 people with syncope had an occupational accident requiring hospitalization (2.1/100
3 as associated with a 1.4-fold higher risk of occupational accidents and a 2-fold higher risk of termi
4 We examined the associations of syncope with occupational accidents and termination of employment.
5 ding personal socio-demographic information, occupational activities, and self-reported menstrual cha
6 ated individuals according to their lifelong occupational activities.
7 ollected after SIC with control and specific occupational agents.
8 , only a limited number of environmental and occupational allergens are available on the market for u
9  tests for the measurement of putative novel occupational allergens that are not commercially availab
10            Risk factors include inhalant and occupational allergens, as well as genetic factors.
11                Baker's rhinitis is a kind of occupational allergic rhinitis mainly caused by intranas
12                                              Occupational allergy health promotion strategies need to
13 g women and men and can affect prevalence of occupational allergy.
14 ow-up, we evaluated the relationship between occupational AN exposure and death.
15 ic stress commonly coexist in environmental, occupational and clinical settings, yet how the brain to
16 ic presentation; show a variety of exposure, occupational and demographic risk factors for COVID-19 b
17   A population-based Dutch cohort study, the Occupational and Environmental Health Cohort Study (AMIG
18 mary and secondhand tobacco smoke exposures, occupational and environmental pollutants, and asthma).
19 r biotic and abiotic particles acquired from occupational and environmental sources.
20 fied associations of childhood leukemia with occupational and household product benzene exposure and
21                                  We examined occupational and industrial differences in lung, gastric
22                                     Lifetime occupational and lifestyle histories were obtained using
23 ational migrants, the long recall period for occupational and mental health risk measures, and the co
24          Co-careldopa in addition to routine occupational and physical therapy does not seem to impro
25 ty and efficacy of co-careldopa plus routine occupational and physical therapy during early rehabilit
26 pa versus placebo in addition to routine NHS occupational and physical therapy was done at 51 UK NHS
27 e-induced hearing loss is a leading cause of occupational and recreational injury and disease, and a
28 ial" (relationships, isolation, social life, occupational, and interventions), and "Self" (effort and
29 ve contributions of agricultural drift, para-occupational, and residential use exposure pathways to h
30 pathways, including agricultural drift, para-occupational, and residential use.
31 c approaches (such as exercise and physical, occupational, and speech therapies).
32 art disease, and other causes resulting from occupational arsenic exposure while controlling for conf
33 w-molecular-weight (LMW) chemicals can cause occupational asthma (OA) although few studies have thoro
34         The role of immunoglobulin (Ig)-E in occupational asthma (OA) due to low molecular weight (LM
35              Making an accurate diagnosis of occupational asthma (OA) is, generally, important.
36 t TMA-specific IgE (sIgE), which may lead to occupational asthma (OA).
37 ess (NSBH) is a key step in the diagnosis of occupational asthma (OA).
38 ods is responsible for up to 25% of cases of occupational asthma and rhinitis.
39          They also had lower educational and occupational attainment (p values between 10(-7) and 10(
40 was not predictive of future educational and occupational attainment for female respondents.
41                              Educational and occupational attainment in early midlife for female resp
42 rs also tended to have lower educational and occupational attainment than their male peers.
43                                              Occupational back pain rates are substantial among regis
44                         Purpose To summarize occupational badge doses (lens dose equivalent and effec
45                For the other conditions, the occupational burden of disease was estimated on the basi
46 is (PAF, 26%); hypersensitivity pneumonitis (occupational burden, 19%); other granulomatous diseases,
47 is (occupational burden, 29%); tuberculosis (occupational burden, 2.3% in silica-exposed workers and
48 urden, 30%); pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (occupational burden, 29%); tuberculosis (occupational bu
49 anulomatous diseases, including sarcoidosis (occupational burden, 30%); pulmonary alveolar proteinosi
50 ndents were also more likely to have jobs in occupational categories with larger proportions of males
51 nsformation induced by the environmental and occupational chemical carcinogen FA.
52         Formaldehyde is an environmental and occupational chemical carcinogen implicated in the damag
53    Formaldehyde (FA) is an environmental and occupational chemical carcinogen.
54 rms regarding math aptitudes and appropriate occupational choices.
55 al Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil) is an occupational cohort study of active or retired civil ser
56 ater-life education-related factors, such as occupational complexity and engagement in cognitive-inte
57 cupational complexity versus low-to-moderate occupational complexity attenuates the performance effec
58                        Results indicate that occupational complexity moderates this relation.
59                            That is, 10) high occupational complexity versus low-to-moderate occupatio
60 n average age of 20 y, additional education, occupational complexity, or engagement in cognitive-inte
61                                          The occupational composition and per-population availability
62                Women are more likely to have occupational contact dermatitis, mainly due to wet work.
63 regarding the merits of these methods in the occupational context.
64  literature review and data synthesis of the occupational contribution to the burden of the major non
65 n HCP will require attending to cultural and occupational differences.
66                        Silicosis is a common occupational disease and represents a significant contri
67 gests that sarcoidosis in veterans may be an occupational disease.
68 levels of ionizing radiation, although their occupational doses are within U.S. regulatory limits.
69        Entries judged to be uninformative of occupational doses to FGI procedures staff were excluded
70                           Monthly and annual occupational doses were described using summary statisti
71 ve, quantitative review and synthesis of the occupational effects of C available in the literature.
72 biology and behaviors, despite centrality of occupational environments in the viral spread.
73 cations of race-based metrics widely used in occupational epidemiology.
74  studies will examine the contribution of an occupational exposure (e.g., welding fume inhalation) in
75 .,) is of crucial importance in the field of occupational exposure and human health-related applicati
76  worker effects can be present in studies of occupational exposure and pregnancy outcomes, and many o
77 demic is unclear given the potential risk of occupational exposure during primary percutaneous corona
78 me and resistome of veterinary students with occupational exposure for 3 months.
79 ) who contracted unusual dermatitis after an occupational exposure in July and August of 2012 while w
80                                              Occupational exposure is an important, global cause of r
81 cant that disrupts mitochondrial function at occupational exposure levels.
82 characterize major food allergens and define occupational exposure limits, evaluate the relative cont
83 though concentrations did not exceed current occupational exposure limits, wildland firefighters are
84 cern from an environmental and, potentially, occupational exposure perspective are the concentrations
85  a major scientific gap on how to assess the occupational exposure risk of mosquito biting and arbovi
86 rted two fatalities (n = 1,280 cases) and an occupational exposure study of 19 forestry workers repor
87 caused by environmental exposures, including occupational exposure to alpha radiation emitted by plut
88                           HCP with high-risk occupational exposure to COVID-19 had increased probabil
89                        HCP with a history of occupational exposure to COVID-19 were notified to the H
90 ung cancer and subtype risks associated with occupational exposure to diesel exhaust characterized by
91 support possible independent associations of occupational exposure to ELF-MF and electric shocks with
92              We explored the associations of occupational exposure to extremely low-frequency magneti
93                                              Occupational exposure to foods is responsible for up to
94     A veterinarian became infected following occupational exposure to H7N2 virus-infected cats, neces
95  prevalence among adults with versus without occupational exposure to IHOs and among children living
96                              One person with occupational exposure to infected cats became infected w
97 workers with respiratory symptoms related to occupational exposure to peach trees.
98                             Both private and occupational exposure to PPD is frequent, but the effect
99                          This study assessed occupational exposure to rotavirus and Shigella spp. dur
100                                              Occupational exposure to silica has been observed to cau
101      We enrolled adults who had household or occupational exposure to someone with confirmed Covid-19
102 e effects has not yet been investigated when occupational exposure, and not employment status, is the
103 phic characteristics, risk factors (smoking, occupational exposure, atopic diseases), symptoms (chron
104 sk, but most of that population faces little occupational exposure.
105 from a canal persisted after controlling for occupational exposure.
106  days was recommended for HCP with high-risk occupational exposure.
107 d self-reported information on lifestyle and occupational, exposure, and health histories.
108 t in differences between types and levels of occupational exposures among women and men and can affec
109 , the current evidence on the association of occupational exposures and menstrual disorders is scarce
110 examine healthy worker effects in studies of occupational exposures and pregnancy outcomes: the healt
111 LLs after 2016 and similar environmental and occupational exposures as before, lead-contaminated opiu
112                          Characterization of occupational exposures from wildland firefighting is imp
113                                     Over 200 occupational exposures occurred when the unknown isolate
114    RATIONALE: The impact of a broad range of occupational exposures on subclinical interstitial lung
115                   Currently, 380 000-400 000 occupational exposures to blood-borne pathogens occur an
116                                              Occupational exposures to combustion emissions were exam
117 an be used as a tool for examining potential occupational exposures to SVOCs among nail salon workers
118                         To determine whether occupational exposures to vapors, gas, dust, and fumes (
119                                              Occupational exposures were assessed by self-reported VG
120 ic regression were used to determine whether occupational exposures were associated with log-transfor
121        There was no consistent evidence that occupational exposures were associated with progression
122 mprehensive consideration of the toxicity of occupational exposures.
123 tyl levels were close to the lower limit for occupational exposures.
124 nmental predictability influence its optimal occupational expression.
125 blic health awareness of the contribution of occupational factors across a range of nonmalignant resp
126                               Geographic and occupational factors affect acceptance and completion of
127                       Personal demographics, occupational factors, and clinic visit variables were co
128 l demographic groups and was associated with occupational factors.
129 olites with sociodemographic, lifestyle, and occupational factors.
130 ficantly associated with improved social and occupational function (Cohen's d=0.39); depression was i
131 ively), depression (d=-0.47), and social and occupational function (d=0.93) (all significant).
132 and self-rated), quality of life, social and occupational function, and depression, obtained at the e
133 ains sufficiently severe to affect social or occupational function.
134 der associated with disruption in social and occupational function.
135 hildhood exposure; decline in educational or occupational functioning after early adolescent use, and
136 ating Scale (YMRS) (range, 0-44), Social and Occupational Functioning Assessment Scale (SOFAS) (range
137 e synthesize 10 characteristic themes of C's occupational functioning: 1) motivation for goal-directe
138  people realize their social, emotional, and occupational goals.
139 nts that prevailed among participants of low occupational grade (3.71 versus 1.96 events per 1000 per
140                                Age, sex, and occupational grade (low, medium, and high) were obtained
141 gnificant interaction between depression and occupational grade in both age- and sex-adjusted (P=0.00
142         We examined the moderating effect of occupational grade on the association between depression
143 t education, applicant gender, study method, occupational groups, and local labor market conditions d
144 tality has improved in men and women in most occupational groups, some groups have experienced increa
145  improve working conditions in very specific occupational groups.
146  association between menstrual disorders and occupational hazards among female nurses in China.
147 y aims to elucidate the relationship between occupational hazards and menstrual characteristics in fe
148 ng in ecological damage, economic waste, and occupational hazards.
149 ers, and businesses must enforce and improve occupational health and safety measures, which should be
150 idence supports airborne precautions for the occupational health and safety of health workers treatin
151 y and guide clinical, infection control, and occupational health decisions.
152 tine infectious risk assessment following an occupational health exposure from a 58-year-old male wit
153 ors believe that ensuring community-standard occupational health for correctional staff during COVID-
154 d health consciousness have an impact on the occupational health hazards of women and men.
155 al sensing as a field of growing interest in occupational health monitoring.
156           The main outcome was prevalence of occupational health outcomes (defined as any injury, mor
157 een Jan 1, 2008, and Jan 24, 2018, reporting occupational health outcomes among international migrant
158               The systematic review included occupational health outcomes for 12 168 international mi
159                      However, little data on occupational health outcomes of migrant workers exist, w
160                                              Occupational health risks were also considered in a sepa
161                                Employers and Occupational Health Services need this information to ad
162 pursue evidence-informed collaborations with occupational health, education, and other sectors.
163 uding business/management, public health and occupational health.
164                                     Complete occupational histories and information on confounding va
165  Europe and Canada with detailed smoking and occupational histories were pooled.
166                                   We defined occupational history by linkage to national censuses fro
167  as is the importance of obtaining a careful occupational history in the patient presenting with pulm
168   Diagnosis relies on a thorough medical and occupational history, functional assessment, assessment
169                           The management for occupational HIV or hepatitis B virus exposures includes
170                                           An occupational immunosurveillance program (OISP) has been
171 ity of life, social, economic, academic, and occupational impacts.
172        Intake fractions from residential and occupational indoor sources range from 470 ppm to 62000
173 hese findings highlight the potentially high occupational inhalation exposures to nanoparticles with
174 ld increase patient comfort, reduce operator occupational injuries, and enhance the use of health res
175                         A range of personal, occupational, injury, health, and compensation system fa
176 the specific causes of death at the detailed occupational level will be valuable, particularly with a
177 .5 mg day(-1)), at levels that exceeded U.S. occupational limits.
178 2) and delta = 0.37(3) due to positional and occupational long-range ordering of Te atoms in the shee
179 ntries, work-related asthma is the commonest occupational lung disease of short latency.
180  not overlook clinically significant trauma, occupational lung disease, or reportable disease, and di
181 of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and occupational lung disease.
182 e lung diseases, the proximal causes of many occupational lung diseases are well understood and they
183  and other action for reducing the burden of occupational lung diseases.
184 ined at the Lower Silesia Regional Centre of Occupational Medicine in Wroclaw, Poland.
185 the pooled prevalence of having at least one occupational morbidity was 47% (95% CI 29-64; I(2)=99.70
186 d that the association between self-reported occupational noise exposure and vestibular schwannoma (V
187 tudy does not support an association between occupational noise exposure and VS.
188             There was no association between occupational noise exposure and VS.
189                                 We estimated occupational noise exposure for each case and control us
190   Among subjects assessed as ever exposed to occupational noise levels of >=85 dB (214 cases and 1,14
191 tionship in a large case-control study using occupational noise measurements.
192 videnced by the social isolation and loss of occupational opportunities often encountered by people s
193                                Self-reported occupational or environmental exposures, including alumi
194 wer rate, and was not correlated with either occupational outcome.
195 lth training for managers might help improve occupational outcomes for people with mental health prob
196                                 For the para-occupational pathway, GMs were 2.3 times higher [95% con
197  have significant potential implications for occupational performance in diverse settings.
198 s the most potent noncognitive construct for occupational performance.
199                        Agricultural work and occupational pesticide use have been associated with inc
200                                              Occupational pesticide use is associated with lung cance
201           Radiocarbon dating of the earliest occupational phases at the Cooper's Ferry site in wester
202 cted to evaluate the association between non-occupational physical activity (PA) during pregnancy and
203              Contamination was highest among occupational/physical therapists (odds ratio [OR], 6.96;
204  addition to the 100% burden for the classic occupational pneumoconioses).
205                                          The occupational population attributable fraction (PAF) was
206                          Among firefighters, occupational position predicted exposure-firefighters an
207 ation about socioeconomic status, indexed by occupational position, 25 x 25 risk factors (high alcoho
208 dicators of socioeconomic status (education, occupational position, and literacy) at age 50 years.
209 ed in subgroups of participants of different occupational position, BMI, physical activity level, and
210 fe table models with covariates age, gender, occupational position, smoking, physical activity, and a
211                          We document a steep occupational prestige level gradient on the probability
212 ited Kingdom, female breast cancer following occupational radiation exposure is among that set of can
213                            Intergenerational occupational rank-rank correlations increased from less
214 m population-the fraction of offspring whose occupational ranks are higher than those of their parent
215 ansformed ratio of GMs from two groups (para-occupational, residential use).
216                                              Occupational respiratory diseases in workers of peach tr
217 nsitization to peach leaves was the cause of occupational respiratory symptoms in our patients.
218 MW) agents have been recognized as causes of occupational rhinitis (OR).
219                                              Occupational rhinitis tends to be higher in women, altho
220 l patients were white and did not have known occupational risk factors.
221 d the association of worker characteristics, occupational roles and behaviors, and participation in p
222 n adults of working age, but their impact on occupational safety and employment remains unknown.
223 rials and Methods The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Coal Workers' Hea
224 handling of hazardous drugs as issued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, US Pharma
225                                  Despite the occupational safety benefits of these new explosives, fe
226 oarding and continuing education programmes, occupational safety measures, and burnout prevention int
227 encies involved in environmental protection, occupational safety, and transportation.
228 ands deployed over a single shift in a dusty occupational setting can be useful for indicating the in
229 ts defining characteristics and functions in occupational settings, and potential moderators of its p
230 g cancer risks associated with low levels of occupational silica exposure and the joint effects of sm
231 ic contact dermatitis (nACD) remains a major occupational skin disorder, significantly impacting the
232 llution relevant to global health as well as occupational smoke exposures in firefighters susceptible
233 sk and prodromal markers, physical activity, occupational solvent exposure, and constipation showed a
234 also been linked to autoimmune disorders and occupational solvent exposure.
235 wed for the production of a food surplus and occupational specialization.
236 ous unit suicide attempts varied by military occupational specialty (MOS) and unit size.
237 eterioration is highly dependent on workers' occupational standing, revealing a second layer of exace
238 umber of previous livebirths; clerk/employed occupational status of the mother; gestational age <29 w
239 is, age, sex, ethnicity, marital status, and occupational status, and our outcomes of interest (invol
240 pline regression models adjusted for gender, occupational status, race, and antipsychotic medication.
241  controlling for maternal age, parity, socio-occupational status, smoking and alcohol intake, gestati
242  medium occupational stress (67.1%) and high occupational stress (13.8%).
243 escribed three distinctive trajectories: low occupational stress (19.1% of sample); medium occupation
244 ccupational stress (19.1% of sample); medium occupational stress (67.1%) and high occupational stress
245             Newly graduated nurses perceived occupational stress differently over time.
246 nurses experienced a significant decrease in occupational stress during the first three years.
247                                              Occupational stress levels were measured using the Job S
248  have significantly different perceptions of occupational stress over the first three years of practi
249  little is known about potentially different occupational stress responses among new nurses and the i
250 ographic and work-related characteristics on occupational stress responses.
251                                              Occupational stress scores at different time points were
252                                      The low occupational stress subgroup had a higher proportion of
253                      In comparison, the high occupational stress subgroup had the largest proportion
254 eling was performed to identify subgroups of occupational stress trajectory.
255 mstances, early-adulthood education, midlife occupational stress, and late-life social network-and th
256 nd phrases associated with job satisfaction, occupational stress, professional commitment, role confl
257 ted nurses have comparatively high levels of occupational stress.
258 Global City' interrogated how changes in the occupational structure affect socio-economic residential
259 fects of inhaled arsenic derives mainly from occupational studies that are subject to unique biases t
260 play a key role in promoting educational and occupational success in early life, but their relevance
261   Motor function was evaluated by a licensed occupational therapist using the Active Movement Scale p
262 gic disability experienced by ICU survivors, occupational therapists could play an important role in
263                                              Occupational therapists have an integral role in the mul
264                                              Occupational therapists have specialized expertise to en
265 e of knowledge of interventions delivered by occupational therapists in adult ICU patients.
266                                  The role of occupational therapists in ICU rehabilitation is not cur
267 therapy, there could be an opportunities for occupational therapists to expand their role and spearhe
268           Stage 1: an invitation was sent to occupational therapists with expertise in FND in differe
269 , information technology staff, and physical/occupational therapists) involved in the implementation
270 ed a median of 18 home visits from the study occupational therapists.
271 ological disorder (FND) are commonly seen by occupational therapists; however, there are limited desc
272 ntilated patients receiving physical therapy/occupational therapy (48% vs 26%; p </= 0.001).
273 managing the symptoms through physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy.
274 e by providing consensus recommendations for occupational therapy assessment and intervention.
275 ollaborative care plus 2 years of home-based occupational therapy delays functional decline.
276 the intervention group also received in-home occupational therapy delivered in 24 sessions over 2 yea
277                           Several aspects of occupational therapy for FND are distinct from therapy f
278 ht self-management strategies are central to occupational therapy intervention for FND.
279 or research aiming to develop evidence-based occupational therapy interventions for people with FND.
280 ified 46 unique original research studies of occupational therapy interventions; the most common stud
281                             Physical therapy/occupational therapy involvement in mobility events was
282                             Physical therapy/occupational therapy involvement in mobility was strongl
283 ral tablet 45-60 min before physiotherapy or occupational therapy session.
284 e whether the addition of 2 years of in-home occupational therapy to a collaborative care management
285                            We recommend that occupational therapy treatment for FND is based on a bio
286 verse needs of ICU patients and the scope of occupational therapy, there could be an opportunities fo
287 The point prevalence of physical therapy- or occupational therapy-provided mobility during 1,769 pati
288 portion of patient-days with any physical or occupational therapy-provided mobility event.
289 tcome was prevalence of physical therapy- or occupational therapy-provided mobility on the study days
290           The prevalence of physical therapy/occupational therapy-provided mobility was 32% (247/770)
291 spiratory failure patients, physical therapy/occupational therapy-provided mobility was infrequent.
292 in addition to routine NHS physiotherapy and occupational therapy.
293  Healthcare workers are at increased risk of occupational transmission of SARS-CoV-2.
294 ion, which was in turn positively related to occupational turnover intention and negative word-of-mou
295 n patient violence and health professionals' occupational turnover intention and word-of-mouth commun
296 er, participants rated their disappointment, occupational turnover intention, and negative occupation
297 y studies of restricting sales to people for occupational uses; four of the seven studies (in three o
298 ut the magnitudes of its effect sizes across occupational variables, its defining characteristics and
299 tive of a potent, pervasive influence across occupational variables.
300 ccupational turnover intention, and negative occupational word-of-mouth communication.

 
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