Shifted firefighter health investigation by personal health insurance record in Taiwan

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Abstract

Introduction: Taiwan’s firefighters use a shift rotation system with 2 days of work and 1 day of rest. Numerous papers have already explored the risks of shift work to the body. However, little data concern the impact of shift work on health as reflected in medical visits. This study used individuals’ medical visit record in Taiwan’s health insurance system. The locally called “health bank” contains individuals’ medical visit record, health insurance payment points and the medicine used. Methods: Consent was obtained from 150 firefighters who were serving under the shift rotation system to obtain their 2015 individual “My Health Bank” medical data. Comparisons were made between national health insurance data norm. Results: Firefighters make significantly more visits for Western medicine than the annual average (firefighters 6.27 vs norm 5.24, P = 0.04142), more total number of medical visits (9.57 vs 7.75, P = 0.0102), more annual average payment points for Western medicine (4079 vs 2741, P = 0.003151), and a greater average number of total annual medical visit points (7003 vs 4940, p = 0.0003157). Firefighters had significantly higher incidents of respiratory diseases, urogenital diseases, skin and subcutaneous tissue diseases, musculoskeletal system and connective tissue diseases, injuries, and illness from poisoning than did the norm (P<0.05). Conclusion: A persuasive health-survey-based method for workers in high occupational hazard industries was proposed in this study, and the result was highly correlated with risk factors of fireworkers. The proposed study method is potential to investigate risk factors of other working.

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Hsu, W. C., Wang, C. H., Chang, K. M., & Chou, L. W. (2021). Shifted firefighter health investigation by personal health insurance record in Taiwan. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 14, 665–673. https://doi.org/10.2147/RMHP.S285729

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