Title: Occupational Health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region Challenges
1Occupational Health in the Eastern Mediterranean
RegionChallenges Opportunities
Occupational Health Conference 11-13 December
2006 Muscat - Oman
- Dr. Said Arnaout
- RA/HSG,WHO-EMRO
- arnaouts_at_emro.who.int
2Six WHO Regional Offices
3Eastern Mediterranean Region
Palestine
LEB
Bahrain
22 Member States
Population 540 Million
4Per capita GDP in international dollars, 2004
Source WHO Core Health Indicators 2006
Qatar 27284
Afg 430
5Population of EMRin thousands, WHO 2005
6Percentage of 15-64 Age Group
7Percentage of non-nationals in the 15-64 age
group
8Labour Force in EMR
- 10 50 of the active population
- Non-local/ immigrant workers represent the
majority of the workforce in some Gulf countries
9Labor Force by Sector in EMR
10Unemployed in EMR 13Source RDs AR 2004
11Informal labour force
- No precise estimates
- However, it represents about 24.7 of the
currently employed labour force in Bahrain and
about 46.8 in Pakistan
12Working children
- Working children (Child labour) are present in
several countries - Figures are available only in few of them
- The working children are usually present in
- agricultural activities,
- construction,
- industrial activities and
- small workshops
13Working Women Are in increase
14What are the main challenges, facing occupational
health in EMR?
15The Definition of Occupational Health (ILO WHO)
- The promotion and maintenance of the highest
degree of physical, mental, social well-being of
workers in all occupations total health for all
at work
16OHS Dilemma in EMR
- Rapid growth of general population and young
people reaching adulthood (huge increase in
labour force, unemployment) - Inequity, poverty, conflicts, disasters
- Conventional as well as new challenges
- Insufficient and inadequate OHS services (human
resources, infrastructure, education, training,
research) - Diverse spectrum of occupational and general
health risks (Triple Burden)
17Triple Burden of Disease
- Communicable Diseases
- Non-communicable Diseases
- Occupational and Work-related Diseases
18Regional Situation
- OH Services are significantly varied from one EM
country to another - Variations include both qualitative and
quantitative parameters - There are very good amount of experience in some
EM countries, and could be used, exchanged or
even replicated by other countries - There is a pressing need to enhance and progress
OH services in every EM country
19The greatest challenge
- How to transform the difficulties into
opportunities?
20Role of WHO/EMRO
- Extensive efforts are being made in countries of
the region, in collaboration with the Regional
Office to further develop and strengthen national
programmes on occupational health and work safety
- Main Goal By 2020 healthy workplaces and work
practices will be widely adopted in Eastern
Mediterranean Countries
21Important Country Activities
- Bahrain OSH Authority
- Tunisia
- - Regular publication of OHS Journal
- - Annual OHS Conference on regular basis
- Jordan National Strategy OHS
- Iran Training Course on ILO Classification of
Pneumoconiosis - Kuwait Healthy Work Places Workshop
- KSA national Workshop on OHS in Medical
practices - UAE National Training Workshop on OHS for PHC
Physicians - Egypt Several training courses for PHC workers
- National workshop on protecting HCWs preventing
needlestick injuries, 4-5 Dec. 2006
22Important Regional Activities
- Regional Consultative meeting on the development
trends of occupational health and safety in the
EMR Current status and perspective, Damascus,
Syria, 16-18 Dec. 2003 - Intercountry workshop on primary health care and
basic occupational health services Challenges
and opportunities in Eastern Mediterranean
Region, Sharm ElSheikh, Egypt, 12-14 July 2005 - Regional activities at GCC Level
23(No Transcript)
24Inter-regional activities the WHO/ILO Joint
Efforts on Occupational Health and Safety in
Africa
- Unified Country Profile on Occupational Health in
Egypt, prepared jointly with all partners
concerned on occupational health and safety at
national level - A workshop on the national occupational health
and safety profile in Egypt was successfully
organized in EMRO, Egypt, 2930 October 2003, as
an activity of these joint efforts
25Collaborative Programmes With WHO in OSH for the
06-07 Biennium
Palestine
LEB
Bahrain
17 Countries
26The WHO Global Plan of Action on Workers
Health2008-2017
- A Fresh Look
- New Opportunities
27In 1996, the 49th WHA with Resolution 49.12
endorsed the Global Strategy on Occupational
Health for All
- strengthening of international and national
policies for health at work - promotion of a healthy work environment, healthy
work practices and health at work - (iii) strengthening of occupational health
services - (iv) establishment of appropriate support
services for occupational health
- (v) development of occupational health standards
based on scientific risk assessment - (vi) development of human resources
- (vii) establishment of registration and data
systems and - (viii) strengthening of research
28New political realities, initiatives and requests
by the Member States call for renewed attention
and global action by WHO on occupational health
29WHO Response
- There is a need to move from strategy to
practical action in the area of workers health - WHO developed the Global Plan of Action on
Workers Health 2008-2017 to provide new impetus
for action
30The plan is based on the proposals for action
made by
- the Member States,
- the consultations with
- WHO Regional Offices,
- relevant WHO technical programmes,
- the WHO Collaborating Centres for Occupational
Health, - the International Labour Office/ILO and
- international organizations of employers and
workers
31The health of the workers depends on a
combination of factors and a complex interaction
between them
- Working environment mechanical, physical,
chemical, biological, ergonomic, psycho-social
factors - Social determinants related to work employment
status, occupational position, social
inequalities and poverty - Work-related health behaviour individual
preventative health practices and personal
health-related behaviour - Access to health services adequate and
affordable occupational health services for
promotion, prevention, cure and rehabilitation
32This plan of action deals with workers health in
a broader context
- Workers health is a public health approach to
addressing the health problems of working
populations - It focuses on
- primary prevention of occupational and
work-related diseases and injuries - protection and promotion of the health of workers
- Occupational health constitutes the core of this
approach
33GPA on Workers Health2008 - 2017
- Outlines newly emerging challenges
-
- Sets goals for protection and promotion of
workers health - Recommends a series of strategic actions to be
taken by the Member States and the WHO
Secretariat over a ten year period
34Objectives of GPA on Workers Health
- Develop and implement policy instruments on
workers health - Protect and promote health at the workplace
- Improve the performance of and the access to
occupational health services - Provide and communicate evidence for action and
practice - Incorporate workers health into other polices
35The Challenges
- Too many workers are still
- exposed to unacceptable levels of occupational
hazards, - fall victim to occupational diseases and work
accidents, and - lose their working capacity and income potential
- In many countries the existence of occupational
health services is very limited and less than 15
of workers have access to them
36The Challenge Opportunity Globalization
- Major impact through
- growing internationalization, competition,
- changes in the regulatory strategies,
- major changes in enterprise structures and
associated technology changes. - Numerous positive effects
- Increasing world trade
- Growing interaction among countries,
- The development of new information technologies
37Positive Role of Some Multinational Enterprises
- Play an increasing role in shaping working
conditions in the different countries - They can bring jobs, expertise, new work
practices, better working conditions, and
preventive health culture to the host countries
38Negative Role of Some Multinational Enterprises
- Different standards for health protection at work
in the different countries - Commercial advantage
39The Challenge Unemployment, Job Insecurity
increasing human interaction
- Certain working methods and emerging forms of
work organization such as - outsourcing,
- downsizing, and
- flexible work practices have an impact on workers
-
- Psychosocial hazards, and work-related stress,
resulting in burn-out, depression, coronary heart
disease, musculoskeletal and other physical and
mental disorders
40The Challenge Informal Economy
- The traditional worker-employer relationship does
not exist -
- No healthy and safe working conditions
- The costs are borne by the community and not by
the employers
41The Challenge OpportunityCollaboration between
all actors in the health sector
- Occupational health is an integral part of public
health and its activities can be enhanced with
the involvement of - health promotion,
- environmental health,
- disease prevention,
- the provision of general health services at work
and other public health programmes
42The Challenge OpportunityMDGs
- What actions are needed to break the vicious
cycle?
43The Challenge OpportunityMDGs
- Elimination of hazardous child labour,
- Promotion of women's health and protection of
reproductive health at work, - Combating HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and
other major diseases at the workplace - Introduction of clean technologies and systems
for management of health at work
44Further improvement of the health of workers
requires a holistic public health approach
- Combining occupational health with health
protection and promotion, - Reaching out to workers families and communities,
- Tackling social determinants of health
- Providing health services adequate to the
specific needs of working populations
45Thanks?????