Title: ESRC Policy Seminar Health
1ESRC Policy SeminarHealth Wellbeing of People
of Working AgeAn Occupational Health Perspective
- Professor T Cox CBE
- Institute of Work, Health Organisations
- University of Nottingham
2Overview
- Development of public and occupational health
policy - Contemporary drivers of occupational health
concern - Current challenges
- Health management strategies organisational risk
management - Delivering organisational risk management
issues - An international perspective
3Policy Jigsaw
Children (Younger workers)
Women
Migrant Workers?
Who else?
Older workers
People of working age
4Public and Occupational Health Policy
- Policy and law has been focussed traditionally on
vulnerable groups children and women in relation
to work - Demographic shifts and economic considerations
have recently forced attention to be paid to
older workers - This latest government publication shows that
concern now includes people of working age - Signals a useful and overdue coincidence of
public and occupational health concern to which
can be added concern for the healthiness of work
organisations
5Coincidence of Concern
Health of people of working age
6Contemporary Drivers of Occupational Health
Concerns
- Current evidence suggests that there are good
reasons for public and occupational health
concern - In relation to work, there are several powerful
drivers that are changing the traditional
landscape - Change in age-related demography of work force
- Inclusion of increasing numbers of migrant
workers - Rapid globalisation of business and work
- Dominance of neo-liberal economic theory and
practice - Increasing precariousness of work
- Rapid developments in the technology of work
(ICT) - Changing nature of work and working
organisations, of the workforce and its working
life
7Current Challenges
- 600 years ago, it was observed that with every
advance in the nature and technology of work come
new challenges to the safety and health of
workers. - Unsurprisingly today we observe a new profile of
occupational health concerns focused on
musculo-skeletal disorders and work-related
stress. - These also represent challenges to the
healthiness of organisations and to public health - They share many antecedent factors hazards
resident in the design and management of work, of
work equipment and of work organisations
8Work-related Illness UK 2003-04
9Prevalence of Work-related Illness UK 2003-2004
10Health Management Strategies Organisational Risk
Management
- In the UK, occupational health concerns have been
treated as health and safety issues both in law
and in practice - Traditionally, health and safety management has
drawn on the risk management paradigm to deal
with threats to safety and health at work - The risk management process is essentially
evidence-based and systematic problem solving - This approach is well established for
musculo-skeletal disorders and has been adopted
as a means of dealing with work-related stress
11Risk Management Approach for Work-related Stress
- Framed by EU and UK health and safety
legislation - Focused on prevention with the organisation as
the generator of the risk - Risk assessment informs discussion of risk
reduction within organisation fit for purpose - Relies on processes of participation, education
and empowerment, trust building and co-operation - Objective is to build into routine risk
assessments good enough consideration of work
design and management factors
12Delivering Organisational Risk Management
- The Health Safety Executives (HSE) national
Management Standards initiative is a good example
of risk management for work-related stress - It raises a number of important policy related
issues - The question of overall strategy
- The issue of methodological prescription vs
equivalence of methodology - The question of scientific accuracy vs being fit
for purpose - The inspection question enforcement or
guidance and support - The capability question defining, training and
increasing the number of competent persons
13The Strategy Question
- Public health strategists have in the recent past
taken a different approach to health
interventions than those concerned with
occupational health. - Public health (after Rose) has focused on the
whole population rather than at risk or
vulnerable groups. - Occupational health continues to focus on at
risk groups. - Currently there is some debate on the
effectiveness of the whole population approach
for public health issues but it is arguably
inappropriate for occupational health issues.
14An International Perspective
- Most developed countries and supra national
bodies have adopted the risk management approach
to health and safety issues with a focus on
prevention musculo-skeletal disorders and
work-related stress are internationally
recognised as being among the major challenges to
health and safety - Prevention work-related stress has been
identified as an epidemic by US National
Institute of Occupational Safety Health one of
the 10 leading causes of workplace death - We are not aware of any epidemic in the course
of human history that has been eliminated through
treatment - However, in some countries but not the UK, both
work-related stress and musculo-skeletal
disorders are treated as compensatable injuries.
15Thank You