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Risk assessment of occupational skin cancer among outdoor workers in southern Spain: local pilot study

Authors :
Magdalena de Troya Martín
Sierra Aguilar
José Aguilera-Arjona
Francisco Rivas-Ruiz
Alba Rodríguez-Martínez
Guillermo de Castro-Maqueda
Jacobo Cambil-Martín
Victoria de Gálvez-Aranda
Nuria Blázquez-Sánchez
Source :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 80:14-20
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectiveOverexposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation is the main preventable cause of skin cancer. Outdoor workers, exposed to the sun for many hours throughout their working lives, are at special risk. The aim of this study is to determine occupational photoexposure and photoprotection among outdoor workers employed by a municipality in southern Spain.MethodsCross-sectional descriptive study focusing on outdoor workers employed by the municipality of Fuengirola (in areas such as construction, gardening, urban cleaning and beach maintenance). The participants were monitored by personal dosimetry, participated in a dermatological check-up and answered a validated questionnaire (CHACES) on their habits, attitudes and knowledge related to sun exposure.ResultsThe median effective erythema dose of exposure to solar UV radiation during the working day (n=20) was 379.4 J/m2, equivalent to 3.8 standard erythema doses, almost 3 times higher than the recommended limits for an 8-hour workday. Skin examination (n=128) revealed the presence of actinic lentigines (79.7%), actinic keratoses (8.6%) and skin cancer (3.9%). The CHACES questionnaire (n=128) revealed a sunburn rate of 50.0%. Photoprotection practices were markedly deficient: only 16.7% of the survey respondents sought protection in the shade, 20.3% avoided exposure during the peak exposure hours and 33.1% applied sunscreen.ConclusionsThis is the first study to evaluate UV radiation exposure, occupational sun protection practices, sunburn and actinic injuries of different outdoor workers in one of the sunniest regions of Spain and underlines the need for effective interventions to protect outdoor workers’ health.

Details

ISSN :
14707926 and 13510711
Volume :
80
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Occupational and Environmental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b37c8a08b084c3a37a0f03ac24bea2b