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© 1995 Oxford University Press

research-article

Facial Skin Symptoms in Visual Display Terminal (VDT) Workers. A Case-Referent Study of Personal, Psychosocial, Building- and VDT-Related Risk Indicators

BERNDT STENBERG*,§, NILS ERIKSSON**, KJELL HANSSON MILD{dagger}, JONAS HÖÖG**, MONICA SANDSTRÖM{dagger}, JAN SUNDELL{ddagger} and STIG WALL§

* Department of Dermalology and Venereology, Umeå University S-901 85 Umeå, Sweden
** Department of Sociology, Umeå University Umeå, Sweden
{dagger} National Institute of Occupational Health Umeå, Sweden
{ddagger} Institute of Environmental Medicine of the Karolinska Institute Stockholm, Sweden
§ Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Umeå University Sweden

BACKGROUND: The Office Illness Project In northern Sweden, comprising both a screening questionnaire study of 4943 office workers and a case-referent study of facial skin symptoms in 163 subjects was recently completed. Previously published results from the survey showed that female gender, asthma/rhinitis, high psychosocial work load, visual display terminal (VDT) and paperwork were related to an increased prevalence of facial skin symptoms.

METHODS: The case-referent study presented in this paper used data from the questionnaire supplemented by Information from a clinical examination, a survey of psychosocial factors at work, building data and VDT-related factors from inspection and measurements taken at the work site.

RESULTS: Psychosocial conditions and exposure to electromagnetic fields or conditions associated with such factors were related to an increased occurrence of skin symptoms. The results also indicated that personal factors such as atopic dermatitis and physical exposure factors influencing indoor air quality, such as paper exposure and cleaning frequency were related to an increased prevalence of symptoms.

CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that skin symptoms reported by VDT users have a multifactorial background.

Keywords facial skin symptoms, personal factors, psychosocial factors, building factors, electromagnetic fields, casereferent study

Revised 1 February 1995


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