Occupational health services for shift and night workers
โ Scribed by Margit Koller
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 975 KB
- Volume
- 27
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-6870
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
It is important for an occupational health service to plan health supervision and measures for shift and night workers considering the biorhythmic and psychosocial desynchronisation, as well as the frequent prevalence of combined effects of adverse environmental and working conditions. The measures taken should be preventive to reduce the expected health risks rather than being rehabilitative. Both a medical surveillance and a counselling service are recommended before and during engagement in shift and night work. Sleep, digestive, metabolic and cardiovascular troubles should be noted and followed up. Medical counselling is especially necessary in the first months of shift and night work exposure and then after long-term exposure. The postulate for timed surveillance and intervention is supported by data of our epidemiologic investigations. The importance of lthe single health measures is underlined by direct reference to the relevant literature. Recommendations that should be applied in ah countries and enterprises are in accordance with the IL0 Night Work Convention 199Oa and include: (1) appropriate occupational health services provided for night and shift workers, including counselling; (2) first aid facilities during all shift hours; (3) the option of transfer to day work when certified unfit for night work for reasons of health; and (4) measures for women on night shifts, in particular special maternity protection (tranlsfer to day work, social security benefits or an extension of maternity leave). Examples of occupational health services already installed in some states for shift and night workers, and information on future developments are given. Up to now the medical service has been implemented mostly on the basis of collective agreements rather than on the basis of legal provisions. The Austrian Night Shift/Heavy Work Law Regulations of 1981, revised 1993, are cited: workers exposed to night shifts under defmed single or combined additional heavy workloads are entitled to a special health assessment, additional rest pauses, additional free time and early retirement depending on years of exposure.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Background Despite the human and monetary costs of occupational injury and illness, occupational health care has focused more on treatment than prevention, and prevention is not part of many clinical occupational health practices. This represents a failure of occupational health car
In most developing countries, the occupational health services designed according to a Western model fail to reach millions of people working in small industries and agricultural settings. This article describes a WHO-assisted project in Sri Lanka to integrate occupational health with the existing p
The realization of problems resulting from the exposure to undue high lead levels of workers in lead-using industries, particularly in storage battery plants, has given rise to a new occupational health service, the so-called type specific (harmful agent specific) group occupational health. In 1988,