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Journal Article

Citation

Bresnitz EA, Frumkin H, Goldstein L, Neumark D, Hodgson M, Needleman C. Am. J. Public Health 1994; 84(11): 1786-1790.

Affiliation

Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19129.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1994, American Public Health Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

7977918

PMCID

PMC1615198

Abstract

OBJECTIVE. The study goal was to assess the extent of workplace-related disease and injury among Social Security Disability Insurance applicants. METHODS. A convenience sample of 240 consecutive applicants to the Pennsylvania Bureau of Disability Determination was studied to assess the prevalence of work-related disorders. An applicant had a work-related condition if there was a clear statement of a workplace illness or injury associated with the impairment, or if the applicant had worked at an occupation with a high likelihood of exposures known or suspected to contribute to the condition of interest. RESULTS. Of the 240 applicants, 166 (69%) were awarded disability insurance benefits; a total of 27 (11%) had work-related conditions, including 14 of the 166 (8%) who were found to be disabled. Forty percent of the 27 had a disorder that was musculoskeletal in origin. Of 59 applicants with cancer, 10.2% had some work-related etiological component. Of an estimated 71,680 adult disability insurance applicants in Pennsylvania in 1990, 5,134 new insurance beneficiaries had a projected occupationally related disability. CONCLUSIONS. A substantial number of applicants for disability insurance benefits suffer from an impairment caused or exacerbated by prior workplace exposures. These individuals may serve as sentinel events for initiating follow-up surveillance and prevention activities.

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