Changes in working practices, demographics, technology and the environment are creating new workplace OHS concerns, according to a new report from the ILO.
Changes in working practices, demographics, technology and the environment are creating new workplace health and safety concerns, according to a new report from the International Labour Organization (ILO).
The report reviews the ILO’s 100 years of work on OSH issues, and highlights emerging health and safety challenges including psychosocial risks, work-related stress and non-communicable diseases (notably circulatory and respiratory diseases), and cancers.
Currently, more than 374 million people are injured or made ill every year through work-related accidents, according to the ILO.
The report says work days lost to occupational safety and health-related causes are estimated to represent almost 4 percent of global GDP, and in some countries as much as 6 percent.
ILO Technical Specialist on OSH, Manal Azzi, said the nature of work was changing and that the health and safety industry needed to move with it.
“As well as more effective prevention for established risks, we are seeing profound changes in our places and ways of working. We need safety and health structures that reflect this, alongside a general culture of prevention that creates shared responsibility.”
In the light of these challenges, the report says international labour standards and national legislation need to be strengthened – something which will require stronger collaboration between Governments, workers and employers.
By far the greatest proportion of current work-related deaths – 86 per cent – come from disease. Roughly 6,500 people a day die from occupational diseases, compared to 1,000 from fatal occupational accidents. The greatest causes of mortality are circulatory diseases (31 per cent), work-related cancers (26 per cent) and respiratory diseases (17 per cent).
“As well as the economic cost we must recognize the immeasurable human suffering such illnesses and accidents cause. These are all-the-more tragic because they are largely preventable,” said Azzi.
“Serious consideration should also be given to the recommendation of the ILO’s Global Commission on the Future of Work, that occupational safety and health be recognised as a fundamental principle and right at work.”