• Title/Summary/Keyword: preemployment medical examination

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The Influence of Preemployment Medical Examination, Pure Tone Audiometry, and Simple Lumbar Spine X-ray Test on the Worker's Employment - The Result of Survey at Incheon Metropolitan City and Gyeonggi Province in Korea, the Year 2003 - (채용시 건강진단과 순음청력검사 및 요추부 단순방사선 검사가 근로자 채용에 미치는 영향 - 인천, 경기 지역 2003년 실태 조사 -)

  • Kim, Kyeong-Ja;Han, Sang-Hwan;Seong, Nak-Jeong
    • Korean Journal of Occupational Health Nursing
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.146-155
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    • 2003
  • This study was conducted for investigating the status of management of preemployment health examination and to have an effect on the worker's employment. Health managers of 103 companies in Incheon metropolitan city and Gyeonggi were interviewed by telephone. Of 103 companies, 67(65.1%) said they don't hire the applicants who have an active pulmonary tuberculosis, 80(77.7%) companies said they health HBV carrier is acceptable but active HBV carrier is not 29(28.2%) companies said they don't hire the applicants who have a hypertension or diabetes mellitus, 42(40.8%) companies said they don't hire the applicants who have a hearing disturbance. If HIVD is suspicious in X-ray lumbar-sacral region, 37(78.7% of 47 companies) said they do not hire the applicants. 29(35% of 83 companies) said they cancel the employment of the applicants who are suspicious of noise induced hearing loss on preplacement health examination. From our survey, preemployment health examination was utilizing mainly as a tool for the selection of health employees who don't have a disease. Furthermore, in many companies, additional test items are being included and getting more strict the selection criteria for preemployment health examination. For the right use of preemployment health examination, author suggested that further studies were needed to select the adequate test items and establish the reasonable criteria for preemployment health examination.

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Developing a Best-Evidence Pre-employment Medical Examination: An Example from the Construction Industry

  • Gouttebarge, Vincent;van der Molen, Henk F.;Frings-Dresen, Monique H.W.;Sluiter, Judith K.
    • Safety and Health at Work
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    • v.5 no.3
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    • pp.165-167
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    • 2014
  • The Dutch construction industry has introduced a compulsory preemployment medical examination (PE-ME). Best-evidence contents related to specific job demands are, however, lacking and need to be gathered. After the identification of job demands and health problems in the construction industry (systematic literature search and expert meeting), specific job demands and related requirements were defined and instruments proposed. Finally, a work ability assessment was linked to the instruments' outcomes, resulting in the modular character of the developed PE-ME. Twenty-two specific job demands for all Dutch construction jobs were identified, including kneeling/squatting, working under time pressure, and exposure to hazardous substances. The next step was proposing self-report questions, screening questionnaires, clinical tests, and/or performance-based tests, leading to a work ability judgment. "Lifting/carrying" is described as an example. The new modular PE-ME enables a job-specific assessment of work ability to be made for more than 100 jobs in the Dutch construction industry.