European Respiratory Review (Nov 2017)

Current and new challenges in occupational lung diseases

  • Sara De Matteis,
  • Dick Heederik,
  • Alex Burdorf,
  • Claudio Colosio,
  • Paul Cullinan,
  • Paul K. Henneberger,
  • Ann Olsson,
  • Anne Raynal,
  • Jos Rooijackers,
  • Tiina Santonen,
  • Joaquin Sastre,
  • Vivi Schlünssen,
  • Martie van Tongeren,
  • Torben Sigsgaard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1183/16000617.0080-2017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 146

Abstract

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Occupational lung diseases are an important public health issue and are avoidable through preventive interventions in the workplace. Up-to-date knowledge about changes in exposure to occupational hazards as a result of technological and industrial developments is essential to the design and implementation of efficient and effective workplace preventive measures. New occupational agents with unknown respiratory health effects are constantly introduced to the market and require periodic health surveillance among exposed workers to detect early signs of adverse respiratory effects. In addition, the ageing workforce, many of whom have pre-existing respiratory conditions, poses new challenges in terms of the diagnosis and management of occupational lung diseases. Primary preventive interventions aimed to reduce exposure levels in the workplace remain pivotal for elimination of the occupational lung disease burden. To achieve this goal there is still a clear need for setting standard occupational exposure limits based on transparent evidence-based methodology, in particular for carcinogens and sensitising agents that expose large working populations to risk. The present overview, focused on the occupational lung disease burden in Europe, proposes directions for all parties involved in the prevention of occupational lung disease, from researchers and occupational and respiratory health professionals to workers and employers.