Transcript Document

The following lecture has been approved for
University Undergraduate Students
This lecture may contain information, ideas, concepts and discursive anecdotes
that may be thought provoking and challenging
It is not intended for the content or delivery to cause offence
Any issues raised in the lecture may require the viewer to engage in further
thought, insight, reflection or critical evaluation
Occupational
Health
Promotion
Stopping people from
being made ill
by the work they do
Prof. Craig Jackson
Head of Psychology Division
BCU
A Truth
“Peoples’ health should be no
worse at the end of a working day than
it was at the start”
M.J. Harrington
(1997)
A Truth
“People who work sitting down
get paid more than people who work
standing up”
Ogden Nash
(1902 - 1971)
The Godfather of Occupational Disease
“When you come to a patient’s house, you should
ask him what sort of pains he has, what caused
them, how many days he has been ill, whether the
bowels are working and what sort of food he eats.
So says Hippocrates.
I may venture to add one more question: what
occupation does he follow? ”
Bernard Ramazinni
(1633-1714)
History of Occupational Illness
Stone-age was first age of occupational risk
Iron-age and smelting worsened this
Mining in Egyptian period: worse job going
Bernardino Ramazzini (1633-1714). DeMorbis Artificium
Industrial Revolution UK.
Factory Act. 1802
Annie Bessant. Matchworkers
Sir Thomas Legge (1863 – 1932) 1st Inspector of Factories
Return to Work
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
% returning to work
Longer off work = Less likely to return to work
<1 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24
months not working
Waddell, 1994
Regional Picture
Self-reporting?
Who’s best off?
Who’s worse off?
Work Related Ill-Health in the UK
33 Million days lost per year
Males lose more working days than females
Days lost increase with age
Low managerial / professionals had highest rate of absence
Most sickly occupations are health & social welfare, construction, teaching,
and research
Work Related Ill-Health in the UK
Bakers appear highly with occupational asthma
Metal workers appear highly with upper limb problems
Mesothelioma deaths high in shipbuilders and asbestos workers
Stress, depression and anxiety highest in:
Public admin.
Defence
Education
Health work
Social work
Troublesome Occupations
Occupational Health Promotion
Pre-employment screening
Health Surveillance
Health & Wellbeing Promotion
1) Pre-Employment Screening
Ensure new employee….
… is fit to work
… has no pre-existing health conditions that could pre-dispose him/her…
… and increase risk of occupational disease / injury
If health problem or pre-disposition is found, work with the employee to still
allow them to take the job:
1) Eliminate Risk
2) Reduce Risk
3) Control Risk
2) Health Surveillance
Routine medicals / examination of employer
and / or
Routine collection of data
Ensure the current employee….
… is still fit to work
… that pre-existing health conditions have not increased risk of occupational
disease / injury
3) Health and Wellbeing Promotion
Ensuring ways of working are engineered to optimize health
1/3 of lifetime spent working
Ideal environment to “educate” the population
Stop smoking clinics
Healthy eating
Diet advice
Exercise clubs
Gym memberships
Ergonomic design and planning
Core Occupational Diseases (EU)
Chemical
Inorganic
Chemical
Organic
Biological
Physical
Dusts
Physical
Others
Cadmium
CS5
Zoonoses
Asbestos
Radiation
Chromium
Benzene
Hepatitis
Silica(te)
NIHL
Mercury
Chlorine
TB
Mesothelioma
Cataract
Manganese
Aromatics
Vibration
Nickel
P.aromatics
Dermatitis
Lead
Isocyanates
Mystery Health Problems ?
Mystery Health Problems ?
Not just the crappy jobs. . .
Pleural thickening
Testing Workers’ Lung Function
21st Century Workplaces
• Global companies and operations
• Leaner & Meaner managers
• Gender issues
• Disability issues
• Migrant issues
• Longer & less fixed working hours
• Shorter contracts
• Dirty jobs out-sourced
21st Century Workplaces
The World of Work and People
• More complex
• Illness + Disease Focused
• Health & Safety Obsessed
• Market-forces Dominated
• Quality Management Driven
• SMEs Predominant
• Mass production
• Low Skills or Training required = low pay
Current Sources of Occupational Ill-Health
Chemicals
Gasses
Dusts
Particles
Light
Heat
Noise
Vibration
Stress
Radiation
Slips, trips, falls
Working hours
Ergonomics
Top 5 Modern Day Occupational Health Problems
Hearing Loss (NIHL, TTS)
Industry, Drivers, Emergency work
Respiratory Problems
Asbestos, Industry, Recycling
Skin Problems
Nurse, Hairdressers, Industry
Mental Health / Stress / Anxiety Office workers
Musculoskeletal problems
Office, Drivers, Industry, Construction
Work Related Ill-Health in the UK
MSDs and Stress show little change since 2002
Mesothelioma deaths and Asbestosis slowly rise
Asthma and Contact Dermatitis show little change
Occupational infections high in 2002 – diarrhoeal disease
Occupational Deafness slowly declining
The New Millennium – The Existential Age
•
Stress
•
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
•
Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
•
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
•
Diffuse Pain Syndromes (RSI, MSD, WI)
•
Non-Specific Effect Modifiers
•
Psycho-Immunology
Professional Meddling?
So what of Birmingham. . . ?
•
Local Industries
•
Local populations
•
Biggest Local Health Problems
•
Any Complicating / Confounding Factors?
•
What is Birmingham famous for?
•
What has Birmingham achieved?
•
Occ Ill-Health in your family?
Occupational Alveolitis
Not our problem anymore. . . .