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Nordic Occupational Skin Questionnaire (NOSQ‐2002): a new tool for surveying occupational skin diseases and exposure
Author(s) -
Susitaival P,
Flyvholm M.A.,
Meding B,
Kanerva L,
Lindberg M,
Svensson Å,
Ólafsson J. H.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
contact dermatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1600-0536
pISSN - 0105-1873
DOI - 10.1111/j.0105-1873.2003.00159.x
Subject(s) - medicine , hand eczema , danish , epidemiology , questionnaire , occupational medicine , environmental health , family medicine , population , occupational safety and health , occupational exposure , occupational disease , contact dermatitis , pathology , allergy , social science , linguistics , philosophy , sociology , immunology
Occupational skin diseases are among the most frequent work‐related diseases in industrialized countries. Good occupational skin disease statistics exist in few countries. Questionnaire studies are needed to get more data on the epidemiology of occupational skin diseases. The Nordic Occupational Skin Questionnaire Group has developed a new questionnaire tool – Nordic Occupational Skin Questionnaire (NOSQ‐2002) – for surveys on work‐related skin disease and exposures to environmental factors. The 2 NOSQ‐2002 questionnaires have been compiled by using existing questionnaires and experience. NOSQ‐2002/SHORT is a ready‐to‐use 4‐page questionnaire for screening and monitoring occupational skin diseases, e.g. in a population or workplace. All the questions in the short questionnaire (NOSQ‐2002/SHORT) are included in the long version, NOSQ‐2002/LONG, which contains a pool of questions to be chosen according to research needs and tailored to specific populations. The NOSQ‐2002 report includes, in addition to the questionnaires, a comprehensive manual for researchers on planning and conducting a questionnaire survey on hand eczema and relevant exposures. NOSQ‐2002 questionnaires have been compiled in English and translated into Danish, Swedish, Finnish and Icelandic. The use of NOSQ‐2002 will benefit research on occupational skin diseases by providing more standardized data, which can be compared between studies and countries.

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