Occupational hazards in dentistry: Chemical exposures and compensation claims analysis

ORCID

Sabrina Gravel : 0000-0003-2553-2700

Type de document

Résumés de conférences

Année de publication

2025

Langue

Anglais

Titre de la revue

Occupational & Environmental Medicine

Première page

A32

Résumé

Background

The dental workforce includes dentists, dental hygienists, assistants, technicians, and denturists. They work in a rapidly evolving medical field, in which they may face many occupational hazards such as bioaerosols, chemicals, sharp instruments, noise, and stress.

Objective

The project aim is to document the evidence on chemical exposures in dentistry and to analyze compensation claims from dental workers.

Methods

First, a structured literature review was conducted using three concepts: Occupational exposure, Dentistry, and Chemicals. Inclusion criteria were publication year between 2000 and 2022, in French or English, and comprising quantitative measurements of chemical exposures in dentistry from a high-income country. Next, compensated claims from dental workers in the Quebec Workers’ Compensation database were analyzed for years 2005 to 2019. Claims were stratified by occupation, sex, age, and type of injury. Annual rates were calculated for injuries potentially associated with chemical exposures.

Results

Twenty-eight articles were included in the literature review. Chemicals measured were mercury (57% of articles), nitrous oxide (18%), methacrylates (14%), and silica (11%). Exposures to mercury up to 3.3 mg/m³ were measured in a dental school. In the compensation claims database, 2229 claims were filed by dental workers over a 15-year period, 96% of them coming from women. While there were no explicit cases of poisoning, there were 331 needlestick injuries and 70 claims for exposures to caustic substances, including phosphoric acids and peroxides. Furthermore, there were 11 claims for contact dermatitis, 4 for allergic dermatitis, and 6 for respiratory illnesses. The annual claim rates for injuries potentially associated with chemical exposures remained relatively stable over the 15 years, averaging 4.0 claims per 1000 workers (95%CI: 3.0-5.0).

Conclusions

The variety of chemical hazards highlighted in our study, together with technical developments such as 3D printing, confirm the growing need for updated data on actual exposures in dentistry.

(BMJ)

Mots-clés

Service dentaire, Dental service, Produit chimique, Chemical product, Évaluation de l'exposition, Exposure evaluation, Risque chimique, Chemical hazard, Réparation des maladies professionnelles, Compensation of occupational diseases

Numéro de projet IRSST

n/a

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