1.Gastric and rectal cancers in workers exposed to asbestos: a case series
Byeong Ju CHOI ; Saerom LEE ; Iu Jin LEE ; Soon Woo PARK ; Sanggil LEE
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2020;32(1):4-
power plants. In November 2016, endoscopy and biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of advanced gastric cancer, for which he underwent subtotal gastrectomy and chemotherapy; however, he later died of the cancer. Patient B: A 71-year-old man had worked in shipbuilding and repair workplaces for approximately 49 years, being employed in pipe laying, asbestos insulation installation, grinding, and other ship repair work. In 2003, he was diagnosed of rectal cancer by abdominal computed tomography. He accordingly underwent surgical removal of the cancer. Based on the occupational history of the 2 patients and our review of the relevant literature addressing the occupational environment, we concluded that both patients had continuous exposure to high levels of asbestos while performing their jobs for 40 and 49 years, respectively.CONCLUSION: Both patients had a history of smoking and drinking (non-occupational personal risk factors). However, the possibility of an increased risk of gastric and rectal cancers from asbestos exposure cannot be excluded. Therefore, we considered that occupational exposure to asbestos had contributed to the cancer diagnosis in these cases. Workers exposed to asbestos should be made aware of the possibility of gastric or rectal cancer, and should undergo monitoring and medical examinations. Appropriate compensation for gastric and rectal cancers that occur in workers exposed to asbestos are anticipated in future.]]>
Academies and Institutes
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Aged
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Asbestos
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Biopsy
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Compensation and Redress
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Diagnosis
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Drinking
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Drug Therapy
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Endoscopy
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Gastrectomy
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Gastrointestinal Neoplasms
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Humans
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Korea
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Middle Aged
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Occupational Exposure
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Occupational Health
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Oxygen
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Power Plants
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Rectal Neoplasms
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Ships
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Smoke
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Smoking
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Stomach Neoplasms
2.HTR and GRIN2B Variant Associated with Cognition Dysfunction in Electric Workers.
Li Feng WANG ; Hai Juan LI ; Cai Xia REN ; Yong ZOU ; Si Mo QIAO ; Wei Jia ZHI ; Chang Zhen WANG ; Li ZHAO ; Ji DONG ; Xin Ping XU ; Shao Hua HU ; Rui Yun PENG ; Xiang Jun HU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2019;32(3):220-225
3.Investigating the Impact of Establishing Integrated Management Systems on Accidents and Safety Performance Indices: A Case Study
Fereydoon LAAL ; Mostafa POUYAKIAN ; Rohollah F MADVARI ; Amir H KHOSHAKHLAGH ; Gholam H HALVANI
Safety and Health at Work 2019;10(1):54-60
BACKGROUND: Increasing the establishment of integrated management systems (IMSs) is done with the purpose of leaving traditional management methods and replacing them with modern management methods. Thus, the present study sought to analyze the events and investigate the impact of IMS on health and safety performance indices in an Iranian combined cycle power plants. METHODS: This case study was conducted in 2012 in all units of the Yazd Combined Cycle Power Plant on accident victims before and after the implementation of IMS. For data analysis and prediction of indices after the implementation of IMS, descriptive statistics and Kolmogorov–Smirnov test, Chi-square, linear regression, and Cubic tests were conducted using SPSS software. RESULTS: The number of people employed in the power plant in an 8-year period (2004–2011) was 1,189, and 287 cases of work-related accidents were recorded. The highest accident frequency rate and accident severity rate were in 2004 (32.65) and 2008 (209), respectively. Safe T-score reached to below −3 during 2010–2011. In addition, given the regression results, the relation between all predictor variables with outcomes was significant (p < 0.05), except for the variable X1 belonging to the accident severity rate index. CONCLUSION: The implementation of safety programs especially that of IMS and its annual audits has had a significant impact on reducing accident indices and improving safety within the study period. Accordingly, health and safety management systems are appropriate tools for reducing accident rate, and the use of regression models and accident indices is also a suitable way for monitoring safety performance.
Accidents, Occupational
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Linear Models
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Power Plants
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Safety Management
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Statistics as Topic
4.Association between air pollution in the 2015 winter in South Korea and population size, car emissions, industrial activity, and fossil-fuel power plants: an ecological study
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2018;30(1):60-
BACKGROUND: Compared to 10 years ago, the ambient particulate matter 10 (PM10) and carbon monoxide (CO) levels in South Korea have decreased. However, compared to many other OECD countries, these levels are still too high. Concentration of air pollutants such as PM10 is especially higher during winter than during summer. The first step to rationally solving the air pollution problem in Korea is to identify the key air pollution sources during each season. This ecological study was performed to assess the association between the number of days the accepted PM10 and CO thresholds were exceeded and the concentration of potential emission sources in winter season 2015. METHODS: An emission inventory of the PM10 and CO emissions in the 232 administrative South Korean districts in January, 2015, and February, 2015 and December, 2015, and the population density, number of car registrations, number of car accidents, industrial power usage, and presence of a fossil-fuel power plant in each district was established on the basis of official web-page data from the government. For all emission source variables except power plants, the administrative districts were grouped into quartiles. Districts were also divided according to whether a power plant was present or not. Negative binomial regression was performed to assess the associations between the PM10 and CO air pollution (defined as ≥100 g/m3 and ≥ 9 ppm, respectively) and the concentration of each emission source. RESULTS: Compared to the districts with the lowest population density, the districts with the third highest population density associated most strongly with air pollution. This was also observed for industrial power usage. Car accident number and car registration numbers showed a linear relationship with air pollution. Districts with power plants were significantly more likely to have air pollution than districts that lacked a plant. CONCLUSIONS: Greater car numbers, industrial activity, and population density, and the presence of fossil-fuel plants associated with air pollution in the 2015 winter in South Korea. These data highlight the contaminant sources that could be targeted by interventions that aim to reduce air pollution, decrease the incidence of exposure, and limit the impact of pollution on human health. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1186/s40557-018-0273-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Accidents, Occupational
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Air Pollutants
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Air Pollution
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Carbon Monoxide
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Humans
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Incidence
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Korea
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Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development
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Particulate Matter
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Plants
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Population Density
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Power Plants
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Seasons
5.The effect of increasing the illumination on operators' visual performance in the control-room of a combined cycle power plant
Seyyed Abolfazl ZAKERIAN ; Saeid YAZDANIRAD ; Seifollah GHARIB ; Kamal AZAM ; Asma ZARE
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2018;30(1):56-
BACKGROUND: Lighting is one of the environmental factors affecting the performance of the control room operators. Therefore, the aim of this study was to compare the control room operators’ visual performance in two different illumination conditions at a combined cycle power plant through field-work. METHODS: Sixteen operators in day shift were evaluated with the Freiburg Visual Acuity test (FrACT) software at two lighting systems with different intensities. It includes the first phase with fluorescent illumination system (Power: 40 W, Color Temperature: 4000 Kelvin, Luminous Flux: 2780 Lumen and Model: Pars Shahab) and the second phase with a combined illumination system includes fluorescent and LED (Power: 48 W, Color Temperature: 4000 Kelvin, Luminous Flux: 5400 Lumen and Model: Mazinoor). RESULTS: Based on the results, visual performance index and visual acuity significantly increased after the intervention (p < 0.001). As to contrast, more lighting significantly reduced the percentage of recognized contrast (p < 0.001) and increased the contrast performance index (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study showed that increasing the intensity of light from the values below the allowable limit to the values above the allowable limit would increase the visual indicators in individuals.
Lighting
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Power Plants
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Visual Acuity
6.Increased risk of thyroid cancer in female residents nearby nuclear power plants in Korea: was it due to detection bias?
Bong Kyu KIM ; Jung Min KIM ; Myoung Hee KIM ; Do Myung PAEK ; Seung Sik HWANG ; Mi Na HA ; Young Su JU
Annals of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2018;30(1):21-
BACKGROUND: The Korea Radiation Effect & Epidemiology Cohort METHODS: Using the KREEC-R raw data, we calculated age standardized rates (ASRs) of female thyroid cancer and re-analyzed the results of survey on the use of medical services. We also marked the administrative districts of residents who received the Radiation Health Research Institute (RHRI) health examinations and those in which thyroid cancer case occurred as per the Chonnam National University Research Institute of Medical Sciences (RIMS) final report on maps where the locations of NPPs and 5 km-radii around them were also indicated. And we compared the incidence rates of Radiation-induced cancer measured between the first period when RHRI health examinations were not yet implemented, and the second period when the RHRI health examinations were implemented. RESULTS: The ASR for the far-distance group, which comprised residents living in areas outside the 30 km radius of the NPPs, increased rapidly after 2000; however, that of the exposed group, which comprised residents living within a 5 km radius of the NPPs, started to increase rapidly even before 1995. The frequencies of the use of medical services were significantly higher in the intermediate proximate group, which comprised residents living within a 5–30 km radius of the NPPs, than in the exposed group in women. In case of female thyroid cancer, the second period ASR was higher than the first period ASR, but in case of female liver cancer and female stomach cancer no significant difference were observed between the periods. On map, many administrative districts of residents who received RHRI health examinations and most administrative districts in which thyroid cancer case occurred on RIMS final report were outside 5 km-radii around NPPs. CONCLUSIONS: We could not find any evidence supporting the assertion that detection bias influenced the increased risks of female thyroid cancer observed in the exposed group of the KREEC-R study, as opposed to the control group.
Academies and Institutes
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Bias (Epidemiology)
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Cohort Studies
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Epidemiology
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Female
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Humans
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Incidence
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Jeollanam-do
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Korea
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Liver Neoplasms
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Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced
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Nuclear Power Plants
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Radiation Effects
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Radius
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Stomach Neoplasms
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Thyroid Gland
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Thyroid Neoplasms
7.Influence of Ectomycorrhizal Colonization on Cesium Uptake by Pinus densiflora Seedlings.
Sumika OGO ; Takashi YAMANAKA ; Keiko AKAMA ; Junko NAGAKURA ; Keiko YAMAJI
Mycobiology 2018;46(4):388-395
Radionuclides were deposited at forest areas in eastern parts of Japan following the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant incident in March 2011. Ectomycorrhizal (EM) fungi have important effects on radiocaesium dynamics in forest ecosystems. We examined the effect of colonization by the EM fungus Astraeus hygrometricus on the uptake of cesium (Cs) and potassium (K) by Pinus densiflora seedlings. Pine seedlings exhibited enhanced growth after the EM formation due to the colonization by A. hygrometricus. Additionally, the shoot Cs concentration increased after the EM formation when Cs was not added to the medium. This suggests that A. hygrometricus might be able to solubilize Cs fixed to soil particles. Moreover, the shoot K concentration increased significantly after the EM formation when Cs was added. However, there were no significant differences in the root K concentration between EM and non-EM seedlings. These results suggest that different mechanisms control the transfer of Cs and K from the root to the shoot of pine seedlings.
Cesium*
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Colon*
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Ecosystem
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Forests
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Fungi
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Japan
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Nuclear Power Plants
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Pinus*
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Potassium
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Radioisotopes
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Seedlings*
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Soil
8.Radiation Safety in Nuclear Medicine Procedures
Sang Geon CHO ; Jahae KIM ; Ho Chun SONG
Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2017;51(1):11-16
Since the nuclear disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in 2011, radiation safety has become an important issue in nuclear medicine. Many structured guidelines or recommendations of various academic societies or international campaigns demonstrate important issues of radiation safety in nuclear medicine procedures. There are ongoing efforts to fulfill the basic principles of radiation protection in daily nuclear medicine practice. This article reviews important principles of radiation protection in nuclear medicine procedures. Useful references, important issues, future perspectives of the optimization of nuclear medicine procedures, and diagnostic reference level are also discussed.
Disasters
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Nuclear Medicine
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Nuclear Power Plants
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Radiation Protection
9.Relationship between residential district and health-related quality of life in Chungnam industrial complex area.
Environmental Health and Toxicology 2016;31(1):e2016017-
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between residential district of people, such as power plant, steel-mill and petrochemical industries, and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). METHODS: Using a cross-sectional study design, we randomly recruited participants for our study from industrial areas (thermoelectric power plant, steel-mill, petrochemical industry) and rural areas. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify the relationships between Euro quality of life-5 dimension (EQ-5D) scores and living region, while controlling for sociodemographic characteristics. RESULTS: In adjusted model, quality of life decreased with increasing category of age and were lower for females than males. EQ-5D scores of people living in the vicinity of thermoelectric power plant were significant lower than those of people living the vicinity of comparison region (odds ratio, 1.59; 95% confidence interval, 1.00 to 2.53). CONCLUSIONS: Living region of thermoelectric power plant, was strongly associated with scores on the EQ-5D. More research is needed to elucidate the mechanisms which makes the relationship with the living regions and HRQoL.
Chungcheongnam-do*
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Female
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Humans
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Logistic Models
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Male
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Power Plants
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Quality of Life*
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Republic of Korea
10.An Investigation of Health and Safety Measures in a Hydroelectric Power Plant.
Amevi ACAKPOVI ; Lucky DZAMIKUMAH
Safety and Health at Work 2016;7(4):331-339
BACKGROUND: Occupational risk management is known as a catalyst in generating superior returns for all stakeholders on a sustainable basis. A number of companies in Ghana implemented health and safety measures adopted from international companies to ensure the safety of their employees. However, there exist great threats to employees' safety in these companies. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the level of compliance of Occupational Health and Safety management systems and standards set by international and local legislation in power producing companies in Ghana. METHODS: The methodology is conducted by administering questionnaires and in-depth interviews as measuring instruments. A random sampling technique was applied to 60 respondents; only 50 respondents returned their responses. The questionnaire was developed from a literature review and contained questions and items relevant to the initial research problem. A factor analysis was also carried out to investigate the influence of some variables on safety in general. RESULTS: Results showed that the significant factors that influence the safety of employees at the hydroelectric power plant stations are: lack of training and supervision, non-observance of safe work procedures, lack of management commitment, and lack of periodical check on machine operations. The study pointed out the safety loopholes and therefore helped improve the health and safety measures of employees in the selected company by providing effective recommendations. CONCLUSION: The implementation of the proposed recommendations in this paper, would lead to the prevention of work-related injuries and illnesses of employees as well as property damage and incidents in hydroelectric power plants. The recommendations may equally be considered as benchmark for the Safety and Health Management System with international standards.
Benchmarking
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Compliance
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Ghana
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Occupational Health
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Organization and Administration
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Power Plants*
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Risk Management
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Safety Management
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Surveys and Questionnaires

Result Analysis
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