Abstract

Background: 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.Methods: 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.Results: 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.Conclusion: 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.

Highlights

  • Prevention and reduction of work-related ill-health from hazardous agents is realized primarily through the mitigation or elimination of exposures to such agents in the workplace

  • The analysis showed that levels of flour dust exposure in the UK were high with an overall mean ranging from 7.8 mg/m3 in bakeries to 17.9 mg/m3 in flourmills

  • We used the following search terms applied as keywords and subject headings: occupational exposure, occupational safety, environmental exposure, chemical exposure, organic dust, dust, vapor, fiber, fume, and microorganism, combined with search terms reflecting eligible study types; controlled and uncontrolled before-after studies, randomized controlled trials, time-series analyses, and studies on effectiveness of personal protective equipment (PPE) or control measures (Supplementary File 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Prevention and reduction of work-related ill-health from hazardous agents is realized primarily through the mitigation or elimination of exposures to such agents in the workplace. Specific and comprehensive evidence on effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of interventions aiming to reduce exposure and improve health of workers from workplace intervention studies appears to be limited. To generate high quality evidence of effectiveness, intervention studies should incorporate study design elements that minimize bias, by involving a control group, and measure pre and post intervention exposures or associated health outcomes [2]. 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

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