Thorsén Frida, Nordander Catarina, Antonson Carl
Center for Primary Health Care Research, Department of Clinical Sciences Malmö, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden.
Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund University, Scheelevägen 8, 223 63, Lund, Sweden.
J Occup Med Toxicol. 2024 Aug 12;19(1):33. doi: 10.1186/s12995-024-00432-7.
EU workers exposed to hand-arm vibration should be offered health surveillance to detect early symptoms, and findings, of Hand-Arm Vibration Syndrome (HAVS). To execute the mandatory vocational rehabilitation, the employer needs to be aware of injuries found in the medical check-up. We aimed to analyse: 1) How physicians graded the neurosensory component of HAVS on the Stockholm Workshop Scale (SWS), compared to semi-objective findings. 2) What vocational rehabilitative decisions (VRD) were taken by physicians after examinations. 3) Whether the VRDs differed in relation to the SWS-grading.
Data came from 660 medical records - all examinations performed during twelve consecutive months in one large Swedish occupational healthcare company. 572 individuals had data on the SWS from the physician. For the qualitative analysis, we used the inductive-iterative immersion-crystallization method.
60% of the examined workers had symptoms and 32% had semi-objective findings consistent with HAVS. The physicians' SWS gradings were underestimated in 59% of the cases with semi-objective findings. The VRDs were classified, relative to communication with the employer, as: "Adequate" (57%), when no injury was present, communication had already taken place, was planned, or was no longer needed in the absence of further exposure, "Semi-adequate" (18%), if no plan for communication was yet established or only communicated through a document with a shorter time until next check-up, and "Inadequate"(25%), when patients refused (20%), or physicians failed to communicate with the employer, despite findings (80%). Underestimated SWS-gradings of HAVS were significantly associated with more "Inadequate" VRDs in the group with semi-objective findings.
Occupational physicians underestimate the number of individuals with SWS 2-3 compared with semi-objective findings and regularly fail to communicate to the employer despite findings of HAVS. The underestimation of SWS-grading, followed by inadequate VRDs, excludes many workers from the employer's mandatory protective measures which may lead to aggravation of an untreatable injury in the affected individual and development of HAVS in their similarly exposed colleagues.
应向接触手臂振动的欧盟工人提供健康监测,以检测手臂振动综合征(HAVS)的早期症状和检查结果。为了执行强制性职业康复,雇主需要了解在体检中发现的损伤情况。我们旨在分析:1)与半客观检查结果相比,医生如何根据斯德哥尔摩研讨会量表(SWS)对HAVS的神经感觉成分进行分级。2)医生在检查后做出了哪些职业康复决策(VRD)。3)VRD是否因SWS分级而异。
数据来自660份病历——一家大型瑞典职业健康护理公司连续十二个月内进行的所有检查。572名个体有医生给出的SWS数据。对于定性分析,我们使用了归纳迭代沉浸式结晶法。
60%的受检工人有症状,32%有与HAVS一致的半客观检查结果。在有半客观检查结果的病例中,59%的病例医生对SWS的分级被低估。相对于与雇主的沟通情况,VRD被分类为:“充分”(57%),即不存在损伤,沟通已经进行、已计划进行或在无进一步接触的情况下不再需要沟通;“半充分”(18%),即尚未制定沟通计划或仅通过一份文件进行沟通,距离下次检查的时间较短;“不充分”(25%),即患者拒绝(20%),或医生尽管有检查结果但未与雇主沟通(80%)。在有半客观检查结果的组中,HAVS的SWS分级被低估与更多“不充分”的VRD显著相关。
与半客观检查结果相比,职业医生低估了SWS 2 - 3级的个体数量,并且尽管发现了HAVS,仍经常未能与雇主沟通。SWS分级被低估,随后VRD不充分,使许多工人无法获得雇主的强制性保护措施,这可能导致受影响个体的不可治疗损伤加重,并使其同样接触振动的同事患上HAVS。