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Journal Article

Citation

Borjan M, Lumia M. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2017; 60(7): 621-626.

Affiliation

New Jersey Department of Health, Occupational Health Surveillance Unit, Trenton, New Jersey.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/ajim.22734

PMID

28543608

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This preliminary study evaluates a real-time syndromic surveillance system to track occupationally-related emergency room visits throughout New Jersey.

METHODS: Emergency Department (ED) chief complaint fields were evaluated from 79 of 80 hospitals in NJ in 2014, using work-related keywords and ICD-9 E-codes, to determine its ability to capture non-fatal work-related injuries. Sensitivity analysis and descriptive statistics, were used to evaluate and summarize the occupational injuries identified.

RESULTS: Overall, 11 919 (0.3%) possible work-related ED visits were identified from all ED visits. Events with the greatest number of ED visits were slips, trips, and falls (1679, 14%). Nature of injury included cuts, lacerations (1041, 9%). The part of the body most affected was the back (1414, 12%). This work-related classifier achieved a sensitivity of 5.4%, a specificity of 99.8%, and a PPV of 2.8%.

CONCLUSIONS: This evaluation demonstrated that the syndromic surveillance reporting system can yield real-time knowledge of work-related injuries.

© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Language: en

Keywords

injuries; occupational; syndromic surveillance; work-related

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