Title: Occupational Health
1Occupational Health
Professor Peter Sims Division of Public
Health The School of Medicine, University of
Papua New Guinea
- An exploration of a paradigm
- Work
HEALTH
DISEASE
2Aim
- To show how
The workplace can be both a threat to the
health of the worker and/or an opportunity for
health gain
3The Objectives
- To determine the changing nature of work in human
society and its implications for the health of
the people - To appreciate that a healthy workforce is more
productive,efficient and effective - To consider The diseases of occupations
- To examine the role of occupational health
services
4In the Sweat of Thy Face Shalt Thou Eat
Bread,till Thou Return Unto the Ground
Genesis Ch.2 V19
- Professor Peter Sims
- Division of Public Health
- The School of Medicine,
- University of Papua New Guinea
5Human Happiness requires the fulfillment of
three key areas
- In our loves
- In our friends
- In our work
6Ideas Around Work-labour As a Commodity,capital
Versus Labour,the Control of the Means of
Production
- Man as a machine
- Physical strength
- Repetitious
- Boredom
- Long hours
- Poor reward
- Expendable
- The dignity of labour
- Skills and trades
- Pride in craftsmanship
- Apprenticeship
- Price,shortage,reward
- Privilege and power
- The social bonds
7The World of WorkIn the Past
- There was work for the unskilled
- 8-18 hours per day
- 5-6 days a week
- 52 weeks a year
- It was seasonal, sporadic,day labour
- The worker was used and discarded
8Before the Industrial Revolution the Farm
Labourer worked long hours for small wages
The new factories were built in the towns Men and
women found low paid work,with long hours and
little security
9Work in Transition
- The rise of union power and the realisation that
a stable and well trained labour force was more
effective in delivering a quality product,
reliably in a competitive world produced
stability of employment and often a - Job for life
10The World of Work Is Changing
- Shorter hours 6-8 hours per day
- Shorter weeks 4-5 days
- More holidays 46 week year
- Shorter working life-30years
- Work is more skilled,-more training is
needed,-often contract work or part time,-we may
do several different jobs in a lifetime and work
for many employers
11The Modern Office
The Home Worker
12THE CHALLENGE-WORKER VERSUS OWNER
Not just for profit or higher wages but for HEALTH
13The Healthy Worker
- Is more productive
- Has less time off
- Is happier at work
- Is more likely to stay with that job
- Is worth training and investment
14Is This Person Fit to Do This Work?
- The physical and mental requirements of the task
- Physical health of worker- vision, hearing,
speech, mobility - Mental health- behaviour, motivation,learning
ability - Chronic illness or disability
- Work/employment record
15Pre-employment Screening
- Specific requirements
- Colour vision
- Height/weight
- Sex
- Age
- Fitness test
- Iq/personality
- Specific exclusions
- Epilepsy
- Diabetes mellitus
- Hepatitis carrier
- HIV ve
- Alcohol problem
- Criminal record
16Can We Keep This Person Fit at Work?
- Monitor the environment-dust,radioactivity etc
- Monitor the individual -blood tests,radiation
badges, peak flow rate etc - Monitor the workforce -patterns of sickness
absence
- Training
- Protection
- Supervision
- Rewards
- Facilities
- Rest and meal breaks
- Positive health
17Occupational Diseases-some Classical Problems
- Bladder cancer Mesothelioma
- Asbestosis Silicosis
- Contact dermatitis Atopic eczema
- Farmers lung Occupational asthma
18Occupational Hazard
19Occupational Hazard
20Accidents at Work
- The major cause of Morbidity and Mortality
- Largely predictable and preventable
- Minor-a cut finger from a paperclip to
Major-death from electrocution
21An Occupational Health Service
- Screen new employees
- Provide 1st AID training
- Monitor the workplace
- Review sickness rates
- Liaise with gp/hospital
- Health promotion (immunisation/smears/ exercise,
smoking ) - Advice to management
22The Market place needs some rules-Rights and
Duties
- The Worker
- Security
- Sickness cover
- Pension
- Fair wages
- Honest labour
- The Owner/manager
- Reliable work force
- Well trained
- Minimal sickness
- Productive
- Fair conditions
23The ve -ve Stresses of Work
- Shift work Rest periods
- Production Demands TeamBuilding
- Quality standards Trust
Management concern
24Output versus Stress
Output
Plateau
Decline
Optimal
Stress
25When things go wrong
- Strikes...Lockouts
- Process failures.....Faulty product
- Design failure....Staff stress
- Increased sickness..Absenteeism
- Human error...Accidents
- System fault....Disaster
26Some Special Areas
- Women at work
-
- Children at work
-
Prisoners
27Unemployment Underemployment
- Work for men and women
- Work that stimulates and enhances
- Work that is fairly rewarded and valued
- Work that keeps people healthy
28The Mental Health of the Worker
- Boredom-tedious and repetitious work
- Bullying-discrimination and harassment
- Alcohol-poor performance
- Absenteeism
29The Disabled Worker
- Impaired
- Handicapped
- Disabled
- Debarred
30Retraining Rehabilitation Retirement Redunda
ncy
31A Workplace Check list
- The Work Process-what is being done
- The Work force-who is doing it
- The hazards-what can go wrong
- The record-Accident and illness
- The Services-First aid, Occupational Health
- The ambience-Men, Management,Machines
32Conclusions
- Work is an important part of all our lives
- Work can endanger health or enhance it
- Many problems can be minimized or entirely
prevented from existing knowledge - Occupational Health Services can be the key to
worker safety and wellbeing
33Bernardino Ramazzini 1633-1714 Professor of
Medicine at Padua
Medici munus plebios curantis est interrogare
quas artes exerceant In dealing with the
workman the doctor must think of the dangerous
trades