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Occupational Health

Intermediate

Occupational health is a multidisciplinary field dedicated to the prevention, recognition, evaluation, and control of health hazards arising from the workplace. It encompasses the physical, mental, and social well-being of workers in all occupations, extending beyond the mere absence of disease or injury. The discipline draws on medicine, epidemiology, toxicology, industrial hygiene, ergonomics, psychology, and engineering to create safe and healthy working conditions. Historically rooted in the observations of Bernardino Ramazzini, often called the father of occupational medicine, who published De Morbis Artificum Diatriba (Diseases of Workers) in 1700, the field has evolved dramatically alongside industrialization, labor movements, and modern regulatory frameworks.

The scope of occupational health spans a wide range of concerns, from chemical and biological exposures to musculoskeletal disorders, noise-induced hearing loss, occupational cancers, and psychosocial stressors such as workplace violence and burnout. Industrial hygienists assess exposure levels in the workplace, occupational physicians diagnose and treat work-related conditions, and safety engineers design systems that minimize the risk of injury. Key regulatory bodies such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) in the United States, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) in the United Kingdom, and the International Labour Organization (ILO) globally establish and enforce standards that protect workers from recognized hazards.

Modern occupational health practice has expanded to include total worker health initiatives that integrate traditional occupational safety with broader wellness promotion, addressing issues such as sedentary work, shift work and circadian disruption, mental health in the workplace, and the challenges posed by emerging industries like nanotechnology and the gig economy. Evidence-based approaches, including workplace epidemiological surveillance, exposure-response modeling, and hierarchy of controls frameworks, guide practitioners in prioritizing interventions that eliminate hazards at their source rather than relying solely on personal protective equipment.

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Curriculum alignment— Standards-aligned

Grade level

College+

Learning objectives

  • Evaluate workplace hazard identification methods including exposure assessment, risk matrices, and industrial hygiene sampling
  • Analyze the dose-response relationships of chemical, physical, and biological agents encountered in occupational settings
  • Apply ergonomic principles to design workstations and processes that minimize musculoskeletal injury and repetitive strain
  • Design workplace health surveillance programs that detect early indicators of occupational disease and support prevention

Recommended Resources

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Books

Levy, Wegman, Baron, and Sokas' Occupational and Environmental Health: Recognizing and Preventing Disease and Injury

by Barry S. Levy, David H. Wegman, Sherry L. Baron, Rosemary K. Sokas

Textbook of Clinical Occupational and Environmental Medicine

by Linda Rosenstock, Mark R. Cullen, Carl A. Brodkin, Carrie A. Redlich

Occupational Health: Recognizing and Preventing Work-Related Disease and Injury

by Barry S. Levy and David H. Wegman

Patty's Industrial Hygiene

by Vernon E. Rose and Barbara Cohrssen

Courses

Occupational Health in Developing Countries

CourseraEnroll

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 30-Hour General Industry

OSHA Education CenterEnroll

Introduction to Occupational Health Psychology

edXEnroll
Medicine & Health

Epidemiology

The study of disease distribution and determinants in populations, forming the scientific foundation of public health practice and policy.

Intermediate
Medicine & Health

Public Health

The science and practice of protecting and improving population health through epidemiology, disease prevention, health promotion, policy, and addressing the social determinants that shape health outcomes.

Intermediate
Interdisciplinary

Toxicology

The scientific study of how chemical, physical, and biological agents cause adverse effects in living organisms, encompassing dose-response relationships, risk assessment, and poison management.

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Medicine & Health

Environmental Health

The study of how environmental factors such as air quality, water contamination, toxic exposures, and climate change affect human health and well-being.

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Social Sciences

Industrial-Organizational Psychology

The scientific study of human behavior in the workplace, applying psychological principles to improve employee selection, performance, motivation, leadership, and organizational effectiveness.

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Business & Finance

Human Resource Management

The strategic management of an organization's workforce, covering recruitment, development, compensation, and employee relations to achieve business objectives.

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Medicine & Health

Population Health

The study of health outcomes and their determinants across defined groups of people, focusing on reducing disparities and improving well-being through upstream, system-level interventions.

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