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Occupational Medicine Advance Access originally published online on July 30, 2008
Occupational Medicine 2008 58(7):464-467; doi:10.1093/occmed/kqn089
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Occupational Medicine. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Work-related sickness absences and mandatory occupational health surveillance

Anna Katharina Mortelmans1, Peter Donceel2, Dirk Lahaye2 and Simon Bulterys1

1 Occupational Health Service IDEWE, Heverlee, Belgium
2 Department of Occupational, Environmental and Insurance Medicine, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

Background To prevent work-related ill-health, selection of workers for mandatory occupational health surveillance should be based on the actual risk of work-related disease.

Aims (i) To determine the proportion of sick-listed workers with self-reported work-related health problems not under mandatory occupational health surveillance. (ii) To determine whether self-reported work-related sickness absences occur more frequently among workers under mandatory occupational health surveillance or among workers not under mandatory surveillance.

Methods Questionnaire-based descriptive study. The setting was the work inability assessment consultation of social insurance physicians in Belgium. Patients’ inclusion criteria were employee, age 18–50 and 1–12 months of sickness absence. Workers with pregnancy-related sicknesses were excluded. We cross-tabulated the questionnaire results, noting (i) the workers’ perception of the work relatedness of their sickness absence and (ii) workers’ knowledge of the occupational physician, which was assumed to reflect workers who had undergone mandatory occupational health surveillance.

Results There were 1564 participants. Thirty-seven per cent of workers with self-reported work-related sickness absences were not under mandatory occupational health surveillance. Work-related sickness absences occurred as frequently among workers under mandatory occupational surveillance as among those not under mandatory occupational health surveillance (34 and 35%, respectively; P = 0.80).

Conclusion To prevent work-related illnesses and sickness absences, a revision of the mandatory occupational health surveillance system is indicated.

Keywords      Occupational health service; occupational physician; sickness absence; work-related symptoms


Correspondence to: Anna Katharina Mortelmans, Occupational Health Service IDEWE, Interleuvenlaan 58, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium. Tel: +32 16390523; fax: +32 16400236; e-mail: katrien.mortelmans{at}idewe.be


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