Health Care


DOL Releases Final Rule Updating Procedures for Federal Workers' Compensation Act Claims

The rule adds the skin as a covered organ retroactive to Sept. 11, 2001, under the act's schedule award provision, providing up to 205 weeks of compensation for burns, cancers, and other medical conditions that impair the skin's function.

Link Between Medication Adherence and Workplace Health Studied

The study suggests that individual health risks and comorbidity—that is, the presence of more than one chronic disease—remain significant predictors of reduced workplace productivity, even in a population with a high rate of medication adherence.

FDA Finds Possible Link Between Evergreen Sprouts and Salmonella Outbreaks

Consumption of the sprouts is tied to 20 reported cases, including one hospitalization, of Salmonella Enteritidis in Idaho, Montana, New Jersey, North Dakota and Washington.

New MSHA Training Tools Address Miners' Rights, Responsibilities

The Web-based tools include the full text of “A Guide to Miners' Rights and Responsibilities,” links to additional information on miners' rights, an electronic form for filing an anonymous hazard complaint, a discrimination complaint packet, and black lung benefits and resources.

Cal/OSHA Ramping Up Enforcement Efforts as Heat Rises

Enforcement efforts include statewide traveling heat sweeps, local district actions when temperatures soar, and workers are at greatest risk, as well as multi-agency enforcement through the Economic and Employment Enforcement Coalition.

MSHA Publishes Final Rule for Rock Dust

The rule requires mine operators to maintain the percentage of incombustible content of the combined coal dust, rock dust, and other dust at 80 percent in all accessible areas of underground bituminous coal mines.

AHA: Shorter Pause in CPR Before Defibrillator Use Improves Cardiac Arrest Survival

Based on previous studies, American Heart Association resuscitation guidelines advise minimizing interruptions to chest compressions to 10 seconds or less.

The report note that policies and regulations beyond the health sector can have a significant impact on public health.

Clarion Calls for Healthier Approach

An Institute of Medicine report urges all levels of U.S. government to adopt a structured approach to consider the health effects of any major legislation or regulation, while a CDC study found only 10 percent of U.S. high school students meet Healthy People 2020 physical activity goals.



Susan G. Komen Founder Paints PDC Pink

"Your success relies on your ability to stay focused," said keynote speaker Nancy G. Brinker. "In your own work, your own lives, never doubt the power you have to set and achieve goals. One person can change the world."

Session Spotlights AED Maintenance, New Technology

If workplaces installed AEDs more than five years ago, the devices need to be checked and possibly replaced.

New Washington Workers' Comp Bill Creates Program for Injured Employees

Employers who provide temporary work that allows an injured worker to "Stay at Work" while recovering from an injury will be eligible to be reimbursed for half of the worker's wages.

FDA Offers Guidance for MRSA Diagnostic Devices

The draft guidance recommends studies for establishing the devices' performance characteristics, to aid in preventing and controling infections in health care settings.

Methylene Chloride Exposure Leads to Firm's $49,000 Penalty

"Methylene chloride exposure can have very serious health effects, such as cancer and cardiac distress," said Paula Dixon-Roderick, director of OSHA's area office in Marlton, N.J.

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Aubree Rundle shot this photograph (available at the DoD online photo archive) in February 2010 of Army Capt. Bryan Johnson and Staff Sgt. Dean Bostick checking the vital signs of a wounded Afghan national army soldier on board a Chinook helicopter at Kandahar Airfield in Afghanistan.

$25 Million Settlement Involves Drug Marketed to Army

Novo Nordisk Inc., a Danish drug maker, agreed to pay that amount to resolve its civil liability for illegally promoting a hemophilia drug for treating traumatic bleeding of combat casualties.

Low Rate of Lung Function Decline in World Trade Center Responders: Study

Decreased lung function was more likely for officers with respiratory symptoms, those who were present when the towers collapsed, and those who worked long hours at the WTC site.

CDC: Salmonella Infections on the Rise in U.S.

Salmonella, which is responsible for an estimated $365 million in direct medical costs each year in the United States, can be challenging to address because so many different foods like meats, eggs, produce, and even processed foods, can become contaminated with it and finding the source can be challenging because it can be introduced in many different ways.

Steel Manufacturer Fined $206,000 for Recordkeeping Violations

The willful violations address the company’s failure, from 2007 to 2010, to record standard threshold shifts on the OSHA 300 Log when employees’ hearing tests revealed that they experienced a work-related STS and the employees’ total hearing level was 25 decibels or more above audiometric zero.

Study Backs Usefulness of First Aid Cabinets

"The increasing number of absences due to employee illness further makes the case for on-site first aid kits or cabinets in the workplace," said John Amann, Cintas Corporation's senior director of operations.

The ASCO meeting was the showcase for major announcements of clinical trial successes and analyses of the progress made against cancer worldwide.

Paris Oncology Expert Receives Achievement Award

At the American Society of Clinical Oncology's conference in Chicago, Dr. David Khayat, MD, Ph.D., of Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital received the 2011 Distinguished Achievement Award for promoting oncology care in France.

NSC Launches Campaign to Prevent Overexertion Injuries

Overexertion is the third leading cause of unintentional injuries treated in emergency departments in the United States, accounting for an estimated 3.3 million visits annually.

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