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Time and knowledge barriers to recognizing occupational disease.

P Harber1, B Merz

  • 1UCLA Occupational-Environmental Medicine, 10940 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1220, Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA. pharber@ucla.edu

Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine
|April 5, 2001
PubMed
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Practitioner barriers to recognizing occupational disease are more than just inadequate training. Time constraints are as significant as knowledge gaps, suggesting new strategies are needed for effective occupational disease identification.

Area of Science:

  • Occupational Medicine
  • Public Health
  • Clinical Practice

Background:

  • Inadequate training is traditionally viewed as the primary obstacle to recognizing occupational diseases.
  • A survey was conducted to identify the most significant barriers perceived by healthcare practitioners.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To determine the perceived barriers to occupational disease recognition among healthcare practitioners.
  • To compare these barriers across different subgroups of practitioners.

Main Methods:

  • A survey of 136 practitioners including primary care, occupational medicine-oriented, and Mexican subgroups.
  • Analysis using four aggregate indices: Knowledge, Time, Unpleasant aspects, and Importance.

Main Results:

Related Experiment Videos

  • Inadequate Time was identified as a barrier equal in importance to inadequate Knowledge.
  • Perceived lack of Importance and Unpleasant aspects were found to be less significant barriers.
  • Patterns of perceived barriers were generally consistent across the practitioner subgroups.

Conclusions:

  • Enhancing training for occupational medicine specialists alone is insufficient for improving disease recognition.
  • Strategies to address time constraints are crucial, alongside knowledge enhancement.
  • Focused, brief patient histories and computer-based methods may be more effective than comprehensive histories.