6533b7d9fe1ef96bd126cd39

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Hospital work and pregnancy outcomes: a study in the Danish National Birth Cohort

Jin Liang ZhuJens Peter BondeAgustín Llopis-gonzálezMaría Morales Suárez-varelaJørn OlsenLinda KaerlevEllen-aagaard Nøhr

subject

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyPediatricsDenmarkHealth PersonnelCongenital AbnormalitiesDanishCohort StudiesPregnancyEpidemiologymedicineOdds RatioPrevalenceHumansReference groupReproductive healthPregnancybusiness.industryPublic healthPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthPregnancy Outcomemedicine.diseaselanguage.human_languageHospitalsWork (electrical)Family medicinelanguageFemalebusinessCohort study

description

Udgivelsesdato: null-null In hospitals, women of reproductive age do a range of work tasks, some of which are known to carry potential risks. Tasks such as working with radiation, chemicals, and infectious agents, as well as performing heavy lifting or tasks requiring erratic sleep patterns have been reported to increase the risk of reproductive failures. Our aim was to study pregnancy outcomes in female hospital workers in Denmark. We performed a cohort study of 5976 female hospital workers and used as a reference group 60,890 women employed outside of hospitals. The reproductive health of hospital workers working during pregnancy is comparable to those of non-hospital workers for the majority of reproductive failures studied. However, an increased prevalence of congenital abnormalities was noted in some subgroups of hospital workers, which may indicate that some hospital work still entails fetotoxic hazards.

https://pure.au.dk/portal/da/publications/hospital-work-and-pregnancy-outcomes-a-study-in-the-danish-national-birth-cohort(7561a320-099e-11df-b95d-000ea68e967b).html