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Journal ArticleDOI

Creating a Future for Occupational Health.

TLDR
It is suggested that occupational health training, professional practice, and research evolve towards a more holistic, public health‐oriented model of worker health, which will require engagement with a wide network of stakeholders.
Abstract
Objectives Economic, social, technical, and political drivers are fundamentally changing the nature of work and work environments, with profound implications for the field of occupational health. Nevertheless, researchers and practitioners entering the field are largely being trained to assess and control exposures using approaches developed under old models of work and risks. Methods A speaker series and symposium were organized to broadly explore current challenges and future directions for the occupational health field. Broad themes identified throughout these discussions are characterized and discussed to highlight important future directions of occupational health. Findings Despite the relatively diverse group of presenters and topics addressed, some important cross-cutting themes emerged. Changes in work organization and the resulting insecurity and precarious employment arrangements change the nature of risk to a large fraction of the workforce. Workforce demographics are changing, and economic disparities among working groups are growing. Globalization exacerbates the 'race to the bottom' for cheap labor, poor regulatory oversight, and limited labor rights. Largely, as a result of these phenomena, the historical distinction between work and non-work exposures has become largely artificial and less useful in understanding risks and developing effective public health intervention models. Additional changes related to climate change, governmental and regulatory limitations, and inadequate surveillance systems challenge and frustrate occupational health progress, while new biomedical and information technologies expand the opportunities for understanding and intervening to improve worker health. Conclusion The ideas and evidences discussed during this project suggest that occupational health training, professional practice, and research evolve towards a more holistic, public health-oriented model of worker health. This will require engagement with a wide network of stakeholders. Research and training portfolios need to be broadened to better align with the current realities of work and health and to prepare practitioners for the changing array of occupational health challenges.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Work as an Inclusive Part of Population Health Inequities Research and Prevention.

TL;DR: Why work is vital to the authors' understanding of observed societal-level health inequities and opportunities for advancing health equity and monitoring progress that could be achieved if researchers and practitioners more robustly include work in their efforts to understand and address health inequity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Total Worker Health® 2014⁻2018: The Novel Approach to Worker Safety, Health, and Well-Being Evolves.

TL;DR: The CDC/NIOSH TWH program continues to evolve in order to respond to demands for research, practice, policy, and capacity building information and solutions to the safety, health, and well-being challenges that workers and their employers face.
Journal ArticleDOI

Heat Exposure and Occupational Injuries: Review of the Literature and Implications.

TL;DR: The emerging literature on the relationship between heat exposure and occupational traumatic injuries and implications of this work is reviewed, suggesting an increased risk of traumatic injury with increasing heat exposure, though the exact mechanisms of heat exposure’s effects on traumatic injuries are still under investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward an Expanded Focus for Occupational Safety and Health: A Commentary

TL;DR: It is argued that an expanded focus for occupational safety and health (OSH) is necessary to prepare for and respond rapidly to future changes in the world of work that will certainly challenge traditional OSH systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating Employment Quality as a Determinant of Health in a Changing Labor Market.

TL;DR: It is found that EQ is associated with self-rated health, mental health, and occupational injury in the contemporary U.S. labor market, as measured by a multidimensional construct of employment quality (EQ) derived from latent class analysis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The exposome: from concept to utility

TL;DR: The exposome is defined to provide a comprehensive description of lifelong exposure history in the broad sense of ‘non-genetic’ and to describe how its realisation may be achieved in epidemiological studies.
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Precarious Employment: Understanding an Emerging Social Determinant of Health

TL;DR: The historical, economic, and political factors that link precarious employment to health and health equity are identified; concepts, models, instruments, and findings on precarious employment and health inequalities are reviewed; the strengths and weaknesses of this literature are summarized; and substantive and methodological challenges are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Digital disease detection--harnessing the Web for public health surveillance

TL;DR: A new generation of disease-surveillance “mashups” can mine, categorize, filter, and visualize online intelligence about epidemics in real time.
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Occupational Injury and Illness Surveillance: Conceptual Filters Explain Underreporting

TL;DR: Empirical findings indicate that workers repeatedly risk adverse consequences for attempting to complete these steps of documentation, while systems for ensuring their completion are weak or absent.
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The Rise and Nature of Alternative Work Arrangements in the United States, 1995–2015:

TL;DR: The authors conducted a version of the Contingent Worker Survey as part of the RAND American Life Panel in late 2015, and found that the survey results pointed to a r... and a r...
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