
Occupational Voice : Care and Cure.
Title:
Occupational Voice : Care and Cure.
Author:
Dejonckere, P.H.
ISBN:
9789062997985
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (219 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Introduction -- Criteria for occupational risk in vocalization -- Gender differences in the prevalence of occupational voice disorders. Some anatomical factors that possibly contribute -- Voice dosimetry -- Room acoustics. How they affect vocal production and perception -- Phoniatric fitness examinations. Evaluation of long-term experiences -- Voice in the classroom. A re-evaluation -- Air pollution and environmental factors. Their importance in the etiology of occupational voice disorders -- Performance stress in professional voice users -- Predictive parameters in occupational dysphonia. Myth or reality? -- Occupational voice disorders and the Voice Handicap Index -- A survey on the occupational safety and health arrangements for voice and speech professionals in Europe -- The spirit of laws on occupational diseases. Historical background and comparative overview of European legislations -- The challenge of determining work-related voice/speech disabilities in California. A multi-disciplinary laryngology and voice pathology evaluation -- Basic elements in voice therapy. A system for indexing and quantifying the contents of the functional approach, particularly in occupational voice disorders -- Theoretical and practical considerations in the occupational use of voice amplification devices -- Treatment outcomes in occupational voice disorders -- Medico-legal impairment and invalidity in different American and European countries -- Index of authors.
Abstract:
"People using their voice professionally are at risk for occupational voice diseases, and require specific prevention and treatment" was the topic focused on by the third Pan European Voice Conference, organized in August 1999 at Utrecht University. The present book includes the main tutorial lectures, with reviews of the most relevant research data and opinions regarding this specific area of concern. Occupational voice users include not only singers and actors, but also teachers, politicians, lawyers, clergymen, telephone operators, etc.(1). The pathogenesis of voice disorders in such patients can be primarily related to their occupation, and thus, after adequate differential diagnosis, these need to be recognized as true occupational diseases, in the same way as, for example, occupational hearing loss (2). A surfeit of information is available on the potential damage from exposure to excessive noise levels(3,4). Noise-induced hearing loss is generally recognized as a typical occupational disease. The relationship between dose and effect is clear, as is documented in publications by the International Organization of Standardization (ISO) (5). The dose combines intensity and duration, and therefore, the concept of dosimetry is of major importance. Also of importance is the definition of the safe limits for exposure to noise. However, factors regarding individual susceptibility to noise and the reversibility of early effects also have to be considered, as well as possible preventive indices of noise-induced hearing loss (6). In some - but not all - respects, noise-induced hearing loss may be considered as a useful model for occupational voice disorders.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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