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Analysis of Mpox by Occupation and Industry in Seven U.S. Jurisdictions, May 2022–March 2023

Authors
  • groenewold, matthew r.
  • de perio, marie a.
  • moller, kyle m.
  • bui, david
  • saadeh, kayla
  • still, william
  • meh, ie
  • lavender, antionette
  • soliva, susan
  • fields, caitlin
  • hopkins, brandi
  • laramie, angela k.
  • harrington, pauline
  • stout, allen
  • levenson, cheri
  • morris, collin r.
  • creswell, paul d.
  • segaloff, hannah e.
  • somerville, nicholas j.
  • dowell, chad h.
  • And 1 more
Publication Date
Oct 03, 2024
Identifiers
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph21101317
OAI: oai:mdpi.com:/1660-4601/21/10/1317/
Source
MDPI
Keywords
Language
English
License
Green
External links

Abstract

During responses to outbreaks, the collection and analysis of data on employed case patients’ industry and occupation are necessary to better understand the relationship between work and health outcomes. The occurrence of mpox by occupation and industry has not previously been assessed in the context of the 2022 outbreak. We analyzed employment data from 2548 mpox cases reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from surveillance systems in seven U.S. jurisdictions and population-based reference data on employment patterns from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to describe the differential proportionate distribution of cases across occupation and industry groups using the proportionate morbidity ratio. In gender-specific analyses, we found that men employed in certain occupations and industries had a higher relative risk of mpox than others. While occupational transmission cannot be ruled out, it is more likely that individuals with personal and behavioral risk factors for mpox were more likely to work in these occupations and industries. This analysis provides an example of collecting and analyzing occupation and industry data in case reports to understand possible differences in risk by occupation and industry in infectious disease outbreak investigation and help inform resource allocation, messaging, and response.

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