Ea. Bresnitz et al., OCCUPATIONAL IMPAIRMENT AND DISABILITY AMONG APPLICANTS FOR SOCIAL-SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS IN PENNSYLVANIA, American journal of public health, 84(11), 1994, pp. 1786-1790
Objective. The study goal was to assess the extent of workplace-relate
d disease and injury among Social Security Disability Insurance applic
ants. Methods. A convenience sample of 240 consecutive applicants to t
he Pennsylvania Bureau of Disability Determination was studied to asse
ss the prevalence of work-related disorders. An applicant had a work-r
elated condition if there was a clear statement of a workplace illness
or injury associated with the impairment, or if the applicant had wor
ked at an occupation with a high likelihood of exposures known or susp
ected to contribute to the condition of interest. Results. Of the 240
applicants, 166 (69%) were awarded disability insurance benefits; a to
tal of 27 (11%) had work-related conditions, including 14 of the 166 (
8%) who were found to be disabled. Forty percent of the 27 had a disor
der that was musculoskeletal in origin. Of 59 applicants with cancer,
10.2% had some work-related etiological component. Of an estimated 71
680 adult disability insurance applicants in Pennsylvania in 1990, 513
4 new insurance beneficiaries had a projected occupationally related d
isability. Conclusions. A substantial number of applicants for disabil
ity insurance benefits suffer from an impairment caused or exacerbated
by prior workplace exposures. These individuals may serve as sentinel
events for initiating follow-up surveillance and prevention activitie
s.