Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3213829958> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 92 of
92
with 100 items per page.
- W3213829958 abstract "Background: According to the World Health Organization, occupational exposures to hazardous chemicals are estimated to cause over 370,000 premature annual deaths. The risks due to multiple workplace chemical exposures, and those occupations most susceptible to the resulting health effects, remain poorly characterized. The aim of this study is to identify occupations with elevated toxicant biomarker concentrations and increased health risk associated with exposure to combinations of toxicants in a working US population from diverse categories of occupation.Methods: For this observational study of 51,008 participants, we used data from the 1999-2014 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. We characterized differences in chemical exposures by occupational group for 129 chemicals by applying a series of generalized linear models with the outcome as biomarker concentrations and the main predictor as the occupational groups, adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, poverty income ratio, study period, and biomarker of tobacco use. We identified groups of occupations with similar chemical exposure profiles via hierarchical clustering. For each occupational group, we calculated percentages of participants with chemical biomarker levels exceeding acceptable health-based guidelines.Findings: Blue collar workers from “Construction”, “Other Services”, “Professional, Scientific, Technical Services”, “Real Estate, Rental, Leasing”, “Manufacturing”, and “Wholesale Trade” along with several unemployed groups have higher biomarker levels of toxic chemicals such as lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, acrylamide, glycideamide, xylenes, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, tetrachloroethane, methyl tert-butyl ether, and benzene compared to their white-collar counterparts. For these toxicants, 1-58% of blue collar workers from these industries have chemical biomarker concentrations exceeding acceptable levels.Interpretation: Blue collar workers and several unemployed groups have toxicant levels higher relative to their white-collar counterparts, often exceeding acceptable levels associated with noncancer effects. Our findings identify multiple occupations to prioritize for targeted interventions and health policies to monitor and reduce high toxicant exposures in susceptible individuals. Funding Information: Ravitz Family Foundation, University of Michigan Forbes Institute for Cancer Discovery, Harvard Data Science Initiative, University of Michigan Center for Occupational Health and Safety Engineering, and National Institutes of Health (R01 ES028802, P30 ES017885, P30 CA046592, UG3 CA267907).Declaration of Interests: Drs. Nguyen, Colacino, Sartor, and Jolliet has nothing to disclose. At the time of the writing of the manuscript, Dr. Patel was a consultant and shareholder of XY.health. Dr. Patel is also paid by J&J." @default.
- W3213829958 created "2021-11-22" @default.
- W3213829958 creator A5006269866 @default.
- W3213829958 creator A5017815080 @default.
- W3213829958 creator A5019061611 @default.
- W3213829958 creator A5028712728 @default.
- W3213829958 creator A5079954964 @default.
- W3213829958 date "2021-01-01" @default.
- W3213829958 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W3213829958 title "Identification of Occupations Susceptible to High Exposure and Risk Associated With Multiple Toxicants: National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999-2014" @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1511010617 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1976204353 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1980615604 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1981837161 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1985724914 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1986497254 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W1995934935 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2005063089 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2005722006 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2016709601 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2024289340 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2024675985 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2032285175 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2040989262 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W206729366 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2072532653 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2074232222 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2079199943 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2108367871 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2141249815 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2153399329 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2171537610 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2287167284 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2514945659 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2521552315 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2541889581 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2555981060 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2735307531 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2748762705 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2899773405 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2973037307 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W2981105845 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W4237033104 @default.
- W3213829958 cites W4361868636 @default.
- W3213829958 doi "https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3950274" @default.
- W3213829958 hasPublicationYear "2021" @default.
- W3213829958 type Work @default.
- W3213829958 sameAs 3213829958 @default.
- W3213829958 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3213829958 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3213829958 hasAuthorship W3213829958A5006269866 @default.
- W3213829958 hasAuthorship W3213829958A5017815080 @default.
- W3213829958 hasAuthorship W3213829958A5019061611 @default.
- W3213829958 hasAuthorship W3213829958A5028712728 @default.
- W3213829958 hasAuthorship W3213829958A5079954964 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C116834253 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C2779874844 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C2908647359 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C2984618805 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C2992763968 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C59822182 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConcept C99454951 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C116834253 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C126322002 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C2779874844 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C2908647359 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C2984618805 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C2992763968 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C59822182 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C71924100 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C86803240 @default.
- W3213829958 hasConceptScore W3213829958C99454951 @default.
- W3213829958 hasLocation W32138299581 @default.
- W3213829958 hasOpenAccess W3213829958 @default.
- W3213829958 hasPrimaryLocation W32138299581 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W2031987709 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W2342845293 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W2514514030 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W3095847814 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W3160724637 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W3213829958 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W4235592929 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W4283033395 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W4307722366 @default.
- W3213829958 hasRelatedWork W2522504705 @default.
- W3213829958 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3213829958 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3213829958 magId "3213829958" @default.
- W3213829958 workType "article" @default.