Hospital employees and skin problems
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Contact Dermatitis
- Vol. 17 (3), 156-158
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0536.1987.tb02697.x
Abstract
A total of 1481 hospital employees answered a questionnaire on atopy, hand eczema, and dry chapped hands. Out of 864 (58.7%) responders. 17% claimed to suffer from hand eczema. There was not significantly more hand eczema among women (17.6%) than men (15.7%). Atopic disposition was present in 17.5% of responders, of whom a significantly higher number (36.4%) claimed to have hand eczema. Dry chapped hands seemed to he a problem in 33.1%, mainly among nurses, assistant nurses and laboratory assistants. Technicians and X-ray assistants (38%) and kitchen workers (35.7%) claimed to suffer significantly more from hand eczema than others. Their working conditions were inspected. Following examination by a dermatologist, irritant contact eczema was diagnosed in 11 of 17, and occupational eczema in 3. None of the janitors or technical workers (all men) had hand eczema.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Hand dermatoses in TromsøContact Dermatitis, 1984
- Occurrence of contact allergy and hand eczemas in hospital wet workContact Dermatitis, 1982
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