Litcius/Paper detail

Occupations at risk of contracting zoonoses of public health significance in Québec

Ariane Adam-Poupart, Laurie-Maude Drapeau, Sadjia Békal, Geneviève Germain, Alejandra Irace‐Cima, Marie‐Pascale Sassine, Audrey Simon, Julio C. Soto, Karine Thivierge, France Tissot

2021Canada Communicable Disease Report12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Climate change plays an important role in the geographic spread of zoonotic diseases. Knowing which populations are at risk of contracting these diseases is critical to informing public health policies and practices. In Québec, 14 zoonoses have been identified as important for public health to guide the climate change adaptation efforts of decision-makers and researchers. A great deal has been learned about these diseases in recent years, but information on at-risk workplaces remains incomplete. The objective of this study is to paint a portrait of the occupations and sectors of economic activity at risk for the acquisition of these zoonoses. METHODS: , giardiasis, listeriosis, salmonellosis, Eastern equine encephalitis, Lyme disease, West Nile virus, food botulism, Q fever, avian and swine influenza, rabies, hantavirus pulmonary syndrome) and occupational health. The literature search retrieved 12,558 articles and, after elimination of duplicates, 6,838 articles were evaluated based on the title and the abstract. Eligible articles had to address both concepts of the research issue (prioritized zoonoses and worker health). Of the 621 articles deemed eligible, 110 were selected following their full reading. RESULTS: Of the diseases under study, enteric zoonoses were the most frequently reported. Agriculture, including veterinary services, public administration services and medical and social services were the sectors most frequently identified in the literature. CONCLUSION: The results of our study will support public health authorities and decision-makers in targeting those sectors and occupations that are particularly at risk for the acquisition of zoonoses. Doing so will ultimately optimize the public health practices of those responsible for the health of workers.

Topics & Concepts

Public healthEnvironmental healthOne HealthMedicineRabiesGeographyVirologyNursingZoonotic diseases and public healthVector-borne infectious diseasesBrucella: diagnosis, epidemiology, treatment