Occupational Asthma

Occupational asthma is the most common occupational lung disease in Australia and many other Western countries. It has been estimated that up to 15% of new asthma in adults is directly attributable to occupational exposures. Even more workers with pre-existing asthma find that their asthma is aggravated by occupational exposures.  [Source: Asthma facts [National Asthma Council Australia (NAC)]]

Follow the links below to find information about occupational asthma.

Reviewed January 2008

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6 Resources Found
Results 1 to 6 displayed.

Title:   Occupational asthma and asthma in the workplace
Publisher:   myDr
Description:   If your asthma symptoms improve when you are not at work, you may have occupational asthma.
Date:   Aug 2006

Title:   Asthma and your workplace
Publisher:   Better Health Channel
Description:   Some job environments are more likely to trigger an asthma attack. You may have occupational asthma. You may have to change jobs to avoid the trigger for your asthma. Early treatment is crucial.
Date:   Feb 2007

Title:   Occupational asthma in Australia
Publisher:   Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
Description:   Occupational asthma is a type of asthma where the cause is often acknowledged. Individuals at high risk of developing this disease include those with a family history of asthma, previous sensitisation to one or more allergens, exposure to tobacco smoke, and, most importantly, employment in a high-risk workplace.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   Asthma at work
Publisher:   Multicultural Health Communication Service (NSW)
Description:   Occupational asthma can happen when something the person breathes in at work causes an otherwise healthy person to develop asthma. This might not happen immediately - occupational asthma may take weeks, months or years to develop.
Date:   Oct 1998

Title:   Asthma and the hygiene hypothesis
Publisher:   myDr
Description:   Read all about the hygiene hypothesis, and how it relates to increased prevalence of asthma throughout the world.
Date:   Mar 2003

Title:   Indoor environment and lung health
Publisher:   The Australian Lung Foundation
Description:   A healthy indoor environment with a low allergen level can prevent allergies and airway inflammation from developing in the first place. This is better than using regular medications to reduce inflammation once it has already developed.
Date:   May 2008
Results 1 to 6 displayed.