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2021 Vol. 3, No. 18

Foreword
Preplanned Studies
The Role of the Kurtosis Metric in Evaluating the Risk of Occupational Hearing Loss Associated with Complex Noise — Zhejiang Province, China, 2010−2019
Meibian Zhang, Xiangjing Gao, Wei Qiu, Xin Sun, Weijiang Hu
2021, 3(18): 378-382. doi: 10.46234/ccdcw2021.103
Abstract(7849) HTML (666) PDF 437KB(31)
Abstract:
What is already known about this topic?

Occupational noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL) has been the second most common occupational disease in China. Noise energy is the main risk factor for occupational NIHL. Evidence shows the temporal structure of noise (as indicated by kurtosis metric) contribute to the development of NIHL. However, the role of the kurtosis metric in evaluating the risk of occupational NIHL associated with complex noise has been rarely reported.

What is added by this report?

Noise temporal structure (as indicated by kurtosis) is an important risk factor for occupational NIHL in addition to noise energy. Kurtosis can be used to quantify complex noise exposure. A combination of noise kurtosis and noise energy can effectively evaluate the risk of occupational hearing loss associated with complex noise.

What are the implications for public health practice?

Considering the effect of noise temporal structure on occupational NIHL, the existing international noise exposure standards (e.g. measurement method and noise exposure limit) for complex noise should be modified based on noise temporal structure. More effort is needed to reduce noise exposure, improve health screening, and monitor occupational NIHL.

Epidemiological Data of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders — China, 2018–2020
Ning Jia, Huadong Zhang, Ruijie Ling, Yimin Liu, Gang Li, Zaoliang Ren, Yan Yin, Hua Shao, Hengdong Zhang, Bing Qiu, Meibian Zhang, Dayu Wang, Qiang Zeng, Rugang Wang, Jianchao Chen, Danying Zhang, Liangying Mei, Yongquan Liu, Jixiang Liu, Chengyun Zhang, Tianlai Li, Qing Xu, Ying Qu, Xueyan Zhang, Xin Sun, Zhongxu Wang
2021, 3(18): 383-389. doi: 10.46234/ccdcw2021.104
Abstract(8174) HTML (752) PDF 234KB(32)
Abstract:
What is already known about this topic?

In recent decades, work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSDs) have become increasingly prominent and have become an important issue that is of universal concern and an urgent need to be solved in all countries of the world.

What is added by this report?

The top three industries or occupational groups with the highest standardized prevalence rate of WMSDs were flight attendants, medical staff, and vegetable greenhouses in that order. Women workers were 1.5 times more likely to suffer from WMSDs than men workers.

What are the implications for public health practice?

This study has found the prevalence and distribution characteristics of WMSDs in key industries in China. It is urgent to draw up relevant measures to prevent and control occupational populations with WMSDs.

Perspectives
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