Occupational Disease I (Occupational Disease)

Occupational Disease I (Occupational Disease) is a disease that primarily develops in workers associated with certain production activities. Occupational diseases associated with a certain type of industrial production are also included in this group. For example, various forms of pneumoconiosis in workers in very dusty areas; glassblowers' cataract; divers' decompression sickness; poisoning by toxic metals of workers associated with hazardous production, as well as various infectious diseases (for example, wool sorters' disease), which are contracted by agricultural workers from animals (see Anthrax). See also Accounting for substances hazardous to human health. The disease is “prescribed.”



Occupational morbidity I is a disease that occurs predominantly in people engaged in certain work. This also applies to types of occupational diseases and other forms of industrial production. In the case of these forms of occupational diseases, various lung diseases caused by highly dusty atmospheres, cataracts in glass makers and decompression sickness in divers can occur. We can also mention poisoning with chemicals under hazardous working conditions, which causes occupational illness in them, and infectious diseases in agricultural workers. To combat such diseases, you can use information about toxic substances that are harmful to health. Medical documents created as a guide to human health.