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Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012

This article reviews the present indicators, trends, and recent solutions and strategies to tackle major global and country problems in safety and health at work. The article is based on the Yant Award Lecture of the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA) at its 2013 Congress. We reviewed em...

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Autores principales: Takala, Jukka, Hämäläinen, Päivi, Saarela, Kaija Leena, Yun, Loke Yoke, Manickam, Kathiresan, Jin, Tan Wee, Heng, Peggy, Tjong, Caleb, Kheng, Lim Guan, Lim, Samuel, Lin, Gan Siok
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4003859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24219404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15459624.2013.863131
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author Takala, Jukka
Hämäläinen, Päivi
Saarela, Kaija Leena
Yun, Loke Yoke
Manickam, Kathiresan
Jin, Tan Wee
Heng, Peggy
Tjong, Caleb
Kheng, Lim Guan
Lim, Samuel
Lin, Gan Siok
author_facet Takala, Jukka
Hämäläinen, Päivi
Saarela, Kaija Leena
Yun, Loke Yoke
Manickam, Kathiresan
Jin, Tan Wee
Heng, Peggy
Tjong, Caleb
Kheng, Lim Guan
Lim, Samuel
Lin, Gan Siok
author_sort Takala, Jukka
collection PubMed
description This article reviews the present indicators, trends, and recent solutions and strategies to tackle major global and country problems in safety and health at work. The article is based on the Yant Award Lecture of the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA) at its 2013 Congress. We reviewed employment figures, mortality rates, occupational burden of disease and injuries, reported accidents, surveys on self-reported occupational illnesses and injuries, attributable fractions, national economic cost estimates of work-related injuries and ill health, and the most recent information on the problems from published papers, documents, and electronic data sources of international and regional organizations, in particular the International Labor Organization (ILO), World Health Organization (WHO), and European Union (EU), institutions, agencies, and public websites. We identified and analyzed successful solutions, programs, and strategies to reduce the work-related negative outcomes at various levels. Work-related illnesses that have a long latency period and are linked to ageing are clearly on the increase, while the number of occupational injuries has gone down in industrialized countries thanks to both better prevention and structural changes. We have estimated that globally there are 2.3 million deaths annually for reasons attributed to work. The biggest component is linked to work-related diseases, 2.0 million, and 0.3 million linked to occupational injuries. However, the division of these two factors varies depending on the level of development. In industrialized countries the share of deaths caused by occupational injuries and work-related communicable diseases is very low while non-communicable diseases are the overwhelming causes in those countries. Economic costs of work-related injury and illness vary between 1.8 and 6.0% of GDP in country estimates, the average being 4% according to the ILO. Singapore's economic costs were estimated to be equivalent to 3.2% of GDP based on a preliminary study. If economic losses would take into account involuntary early retirement then costs may be considerably higher, for example, in Finland up to 15% of GDP, while this estimate covers various disorders where work and working conditions may be just one factor of many or where work may aggravate the disease, injury, or disorders, such as traffic injuries, mental disorders, alcoholism, and genetically induced problems. Workplace health promotion, services, and safety and health management, however, may have a major preventive impact on those as well. Leadership and management at all levels, and engagement of workers are key issues in changing the workplace culture. Vision Zero is a useful concept and philosophy in gradually eliminating any harm at work. Legal and enforcement measures that themselves support companies and organizations need to be supplemented with economic justification and convincing arguments to reduce corner-cutting in risk management, and to avoid short- and long-term disabilities, premature retirement, and corporate closures due to mismanagement and poor and unsustainable work life. We consider that a new paradigm is needed where good work is not just considered a daily activity. We need to foster stable conditions and circumstances and sustainable work life where the objective is to maintain your health and work ability beyond the legal retirement age. We need safe and healthy work, for life.
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spelling pubmed-40038592014-05-06 Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012 Takala, Jukka Hämäläinen, Päivi Saarela, Kaija Leena Yun, Loke Yoke Manickam, Kathiresan Jin, Tan Wee Heng, Peggy Tjong, Caleb Kheng, Lim Guan Lim, Samuel Lin, Gan Siok J Occup Environ Hyg Research Article This article reviews the present indicators, trends, and recent solutions and strategies to tackle major global and country problems in safety and health at work. The article is based on the Yant Award Lecture of the American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA) at its 2013 Congress. We reviewed employment figures, mortality rates, occupational burden of disease and injuries, reported accidents, surveys on self-reported occupational illnesses and injuries, attributable fractions, national economic cost estimates of work-related injuries and ill health, and the most recent information on the problems from published papers, documents, and electronic data sources of international and regional organizations, in particular the International Labor Organization (ILO), World Health Organization (WHO), and European Union (EU), institutions, agencies, and public websites. We identified and analyzed successful solutions, programs, and strategies to reduce the work-related negative outcomes at various levels. Work-related illnesses that have a long latency period and are linked to ageing are clearly on the increase, while the number of occupational injuries has gone down in industrialized countries thanks to both better prevention and structural changes. We have estimated that globally there are 2.3 million deaths annually for reasons attributed to work. The biggest component is linked to work-related diseases, 2.0 million, and 0.3 million linked to occupational injuries. However, the division of these two factors varies depending on the level of development. In industrialized countries the share of deaths caused by occupational injuries and work-related communicable diseases is very low while non-communicable diseases are the overwhelming causes in those countries. Economic costs of work-related injury and illness vary between 1.8 and 6.0% of GDP in country estimates, the average being 4% according to the ILO. Singapore's economic costs were estimated to be equivalent to 3.2% of GDP based on a preliminary study. If economic losses would take into account involuntary early retirement then costs may be considerably higher, for example, in Finland up to 15% of GDP, while this estimate covers various disorders where work and working conditions may be just one factor of many or where work may aggravate the disease, injury, or disorders, such as traffic injuries, mental disorders, alcoholism, and genetically induced problems. Workplace health promotion, services, and safety and health management, however, may have a major preventive impact on those as well. Leadership and management at all levels, and engagement of workers are key issues in changing the workplace culture. Vision Zero is a useful concept and philosophy in gradually eliminating any harm at work. Legal and enforcement measures that themselves support companies and organizations need to be supplemented with economic justification and convincing arguments to reduce corner-cutting in risk management, and to avoid short- and long-term disabilities, premature retirement, and corporate closures due to mismanagement and poor and unsustainable work life. We consider that a new paradigm is needed where good work is not just considered a daily activity. We need to foster stable conditions and circumstances and sustainable work life where the objective is to maintain your health and work ability beyond the legal retirement age. We need safe and healthy work, for life. Taylor & Francis 2014-04-14 2014-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4003859/ /pubmed/24219404 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15459624.2013.863131 Text en Article © Government of Singapore, Workplace, Safety and Health Institute http://www.informaworld.com/mpp/uploads/iopenaccess_tcs.pdf This is an open access article distributed under the Supplemental Terms and Conditions for iOpenAccess articles published in Taylor & Francis journals (http://www.informaworld.com/mpp/uploads/iopenaccess_tcs.pdf) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Takala, Jukka
Hämäläinen, Päivi
Saarela, Kaija Leena
Yun, Loke Yoke
Manickam, Kathiresan
Jin, Tan Wee
Heng, Peggy
Tjong, Caleb
Kheng, Lim Guan
Lim, Samuel
Lin, Gan Siok
Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title_full Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title_fullStr Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title_full_unstemmed Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title_short Global Estimates of the Burden of Injury and Illness at Work in 2012
title_sort global estimates of the burden of injury and illness at work in 2012
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4003859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24219404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15459624.2013.863131
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