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Occupational Disease Determination

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Title: Occupational Disease Determination


1
Occupational Disease Determination
An Occupational Physicians Perspective
2
Dennis Stumpp, MD, MS
  • Board certified, residency trained Occupational
    medicine
  • Current Position
  • Staff physician Valley Medical Center
    Occupational Health Services - Auburn 30
    hours/week
  • IMEs and consulting

3
Legal Definitions
  • RCW 51.08.100"Injury."
  • "Injury" means a sudden and tangible happening,
    of a traumatic nature, producing an immediate or
    prompt result, and occurring from without, and
    such physical conditions as result therefrom.
  • RCW 51.08.140"Occupational disease."
  • "Occupational disease" means such disease or
    infection as arises naturally and proximately out
    of employment under the mandatory or elective
    adoption provisions of this title.

4
Criteria For Allowance
  • Physician opinion more probable than not that
    work conditions are the cause of or have
    temporarily or permanently aggravated a
    pre-existing condition
  • Supporting objective medical findings
  • Arose naturally and proximately out of employment

5
Naturally
  • A natural consequence of distinctive conditions
    of employment OR
  • A natural consequence of work conditions rather
    than conditions in everyday life or all
    employment in general OR
  • A natural consequence of conditions of employment
    rather than conditions occurring coincidentally
    in the workplace

6
Proximately
  • There existed no intervening independent and
    sufficient cause for the disease so that the
    disease would not have been contracted but for
    the distinctive condition existing in the
    employment
  • not required to be the only cause

7
Statute of Limitations
  • Injury - 1 year from diagnosis
  • Disease - 2 years from diagnosis

8
Categories of Occupational Disease
  • Cumulative trauma
  • Other musculoskeletal disorders
  • Dermatitis
  • Respiratory disease
  • Neurological disease
  • Other systemic disorders

9
Cumulative trauma
  • Epidemiolologic controversy
  • Science v. administrative acceptance
  • Non work factors
  • Crossover with injuries
  • Discrete syndromes v. regional pain

10
Epidemiologic controversy
  • Common in general population
  • lack of clear dose-response relationship
  • force, frequency, postures, vibration
  • Anthropometric variability
  • multifactorial causation

11
Science v. administrative acceptance
12
Non work factors
  • Sporting or hobby activities
  • Prior injury
  • Systemic disease
  • Psychosocial stressors

13
Crossover with injuries
  • Acute strain v. repetetive trauma
  • Objective findings the same
  • Coding and Diagnosis
  • e.g. Wrist strain vs tendonitis

14
Points of View
  • Injured worker
  • Employer
  • Attending Provider
  • Specialist
  • Claims manager

15
Causal Inference
  • Qualitative plausibility
  • Quantitative plausibility
  • Temporal relationship
  • Elimination of alternative explanations

16
Temporal Relationship
  • Exposure precedes disease
  • Symptoms occur in proper relationship to exposure
  • Acutely during exposure, disappearing after
    exposure ceases, better on evenings, weekends and
    holidays
  • Chronologicaly appropriate duration and latency
    period

17
Qualitative Plausibility
  • Is the disease/symptoms consistent with the known
    toxic effects of the substance?
  • In the absence of adequate literature
  • Are there others similarly exposed experiencing
    the same disease
  • Does the offending substance share chemical or
    structural characteristics with other substances
    known to cause the disease

18
Quantitative Plausibility
  • Was the exposure level sufficient to cause the
    disease?
  • Comparison of the individuals exposure to
    published toxicology and epidemiology literature.

19
Alternative causation
  • Is there a more likely or preferable explanation
    of causation?
  • Natural course of pre-existing disease
  • new disease onset of other cause
  • concurrent disease process resulting in some of
    symptoms
  • multifactorial cause

20
Occupational Diseases
  • Acute vs. chronic exposure
  • Transient vs. cumulative exposure
  • Exposure often remote from disease
  • cumulative exposures - Cadmium, lead, asbestos
  • latency periods - Cancer, asbestosis

21
Reconstruction of Exposure
  • Duration
  • Nature of agent
  • Controls
  • Intensity
  • Personal protective equipment
  • Engineering controls

22
Sources of Information
  • Patient history
  • Medical Records - outside PMDs, present and
    prior
  • Medical surveillance
  • MSDSs
  • Industrial hygiene measurements
  • Human resources
  • Worksite walk through

23
Epidemiology and Toxicology of Occupational
Disease
  • Study Quality
  • Variety of Study Types
  • Animal v. human data
  • Similar type and route of exposure
  • Random variation
  • Bias
  • Statistical v. clinical significance

24
Epidemiology Interpretation
  • Strength of Association
  • Consistency between studies and groups
  • Specificity - exposures and disease
  • Dose -Response relationship
  • Coherence and Plausibility
  • Temporality

25
Study Design Pyramid
Relative Value
26
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