联邦卫生政策对职业医学的影响。

R J McCunney, W Cikins
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引用次数: 0

摘要

联邦政府的三个分支机构都影响职业医学。值得注意的例子包括:1)运输部裁决(1988年)要求在运输业的不同领域进行药物测试(行政部门);2)《工作场所毒品法》(1988年),要求各组织制定防止吸毒和酗酒的政策(立法部门);3)最高法院关于运输业药物检测是否符合宪法的裁决(1989年),以及根据1973年《联邦康复法》(1987年)传染病属于残疾的裁决。行政部门主要通过职业安全与健康管理局(OSHA)在职业医学方面发挥主要作用,该管理局根据规则制定过程发布标准;行政部门也可以间接影响职业医学,里根总统的12291号行政命令就证明了这一点,该命令要求管理和预算办公室监督监管举措。立法部门制定法律,举行听证会,并要求就联邦机构的运作提出报告。当受行政裁决影响的人想对裁决提出质疑时,司法部门处理职业健康问题;或者在最高法院的案例中,当两个巡回上诉法院在审议一个问题时产生了不同的意见。职业医学专业可以通过了解拟议的立法,并通过相应的信件、决议或证词来参与政治进程。通过参与规则制定过程,行政部门内部也存在类似的选择。政府事务委员会的一名代表通过定期访问华盛顿的主要代表,可以使美国职业医学学院的成员了解联邦立法和管理活动。在适当的情况下,组织可以对影响该专业的政府活动采取正式立场。
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The effect of federal health policy on occupational medicine.

All three branches of the federal government affect occupational medicine. Notable examples include: 1) the Department of Transportation ruling (1988) requiring drug testing in diverse areas of the transportation industry (executive branch); 2) the Workplace Drug Act (1988) calling for organizations to have a policy towards drug and alcohol abuse (legislative branch); and 3) the Supreme Court ruling on the constitutionality of drug testing in the transportation industry (1989) and that infectious diseases are a handicap in accordance with the 1973 Federal Rehabilitation Act (1987). The executive branch plays a major role in occupational medicine primarily through the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which issues standards based on a rule making process; the executive branch can also affect occupational medicine indirectly, as evidenced by President Reagan's Executive Order 12291 calling for Office of Management and Budget oversight of regulatory initiatives. The legislative branch enacts laws, conducts hearings, and requests reports on the operations of federal agencies. The judicial branch addresses occupational health issues when people affected by an executive ruling want to challenge the ruling; or in the case of the Supreme Court, when deliberating an issue over which two circuit courts of appeal have come to divergent opinions. The Occupational Medicine profession can participate in the political process through awareness of proposed legislation and by responding accordingly with letters, resolutions, or testimony. Similar options exist within the executive branch by participating in the rule-making process. A representative of the Governmental Affairs Committee, through periodic visits with key Washington representatives, can keep members of the American College of Occupational Medicine informed about federal legislative and regulatory activities. In appropriate cases, the organization can then take a formal position on governmental activities that affect the speciality.

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