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Resources for Health Care Providers
Diagnosis:
State regulations require physicians, physician assistants, and advanced practice nurses to report to the New Jersey Department of Health (NJDOH) any confirmed or suspected case of work-related asthma, including:
- New-onset asthma - resulting from exposure in the workplace to sensitizers or irritants.
- Work-aggravated asthma - with a prior history of symptomatic or treated asthma who experience an increase in symptoms and/or an increase in the use of asthma medications within two years of entering a new workplace setting, or from exposure to new chemicals or agents in an existing workplace.
- Reactive Airways Dysfunction Syndrome (RADS) - new-onset asthma that develops within 24 hours following a single, high-level exposure to inhaled irritants where the patient continues to be symptomatic for at least three months. Common causes include smoke inhalation and accidental releases of chemical irritants.
For this purpose, physicians, physician assistants, and advanced practice nurses should use the following case definitions to report cases to the NJDOH:
- Possible work-related asthma: symptoms of asthma and association between symptoms of asthma and work
- Probable work-related asthma: diagnosis of asthma and association between symptoms of asthma and work
- Confirmed work-related asthma: diagnosis of asthma and objective evidence of work-relatedness
For a reporting form (OCC-31), download preferred format: PDF [24K] or Microsoft Word Document [64K].
Additional Resources
- Exposure History Form [pdf 896k]
- Industries and Asthmagens Associated with Work-Related Asthma [html] [pdf 56k]
- OCC-31 Reporting Form : Occupational Disease, Injury, or Poisoning Report by Health Care Provider. Download in Word [64k] or in PDF [24k]
- List of Physicians in New Jersey Specializing in Occupational and Environmental Illness