Transcript Slide 1

European developments on
psychosocial risks at work:
An overview
Rome, 5 November 2008
Dr. Eusebio Rial González
Head of the European Risk Observatory
Overview
 The European Agency and its European
Risk Observatory
 Work-related stress as an emerging risk

broad consensus EU-27
 It’s going to get worse:

“changing world of work”
 Future trends: challenges for OSH
 What do we do next?
Aim of the Agency
 “In order to improve the working
environment, (…) the aim of the Agency
shall be to provide (…) technical,
scientific and economic information of
use in the field of safety and health at
work.”
 Tripartite Governing Board, with all 27
Member States represented + EC
European Agency for Safety and Health at Work
A network agency: Focal Points
Eurofound
Eurostat
EU Focal Points
Candidate & Potential
Candidate Countries
EEA/EFTA
Focal Points
Global network of the Agency
IOSH
IOSH
RUSSIA
IOHA
UEMS
ILO
AGENCY
CANADA
ICOH
KOREA
ISSA
USA
PAHO
JAPAN
BRAZIL
AUSTRALIA
European Agency
Partner International Organisations
Partner countries
Under discussion
Psychosocial issues: “new” risks…?
1936
European Risk Observatory:
“New and emerging risks”
“New” if:
A completely new risk, or
A long-standing issue newly
considered a risk due to a change in
public perception, or
New scientific knowledge leads a
long-standing issue to be identified
as a risk
European Risk Observatory:
“New and emerging risks”
“Emerging” if…
The number of hazards leading to
potential harm is growing, or
There is a higher likelihood of
exposure to those hazards, or
The harm caused is worsening (in
severity, or in numbers affected)
Growing importance of psychosocial risks
 Community strategy for OSH (2002-2006): “The
increase in psycho-social problems and illnesses is
posing a new challenge to health and safety at work
(…). The various forms of psychological harassment
and violence at work likewise pose a special problem
nowadays”
 Renewed attention in 2007-2012 strategy: “At
the present time, problems associated with poor
mental health constitute the fourth most frequent
cause of incapacity for work. The WHO estimates that
depression will be the main cause of incapacity by
2020. The workplace can be an appropriate place in
which to prevent psychological problems and promote
better mental health.”
Stress: a top OSH priority
 Consistently identified as one of the 2-3
top priorities by all MS
 The ‘changing world of work’ is likely to
lead to increased exposure to psychosocial
hazards, and therefore to increasing
occupational and work-related diseases
Preparing for a changing world of work
 Changes in society and workplaces that
affect occupational safety and health, e.g.:
Rapid technological developments
 Globalisation

 But it’s not just the workplace that is
changing:
Adapting to a changing workforce
 Europe’s ageing workforce

30% of the EU27 population to be aged 65 or
more in 2060 compared to 17% in 2008
 Women in the workforce

Traditionally overlooked and under-researched
working population; focus on accidents (vs.
diseases)  in-built gender bias
 Migrant workers
Account for nearly 80% of population growth
 Concentrated in high-risk sectors
 Over-represented in hazardous jobs

Natural change and net migration plus adjustments
in the EU-27
EUROSTAT 2008
Population pyramids EU-27
2008 and 2060
(EUROSTAT 2008)
Natural change and net migration, EU-27
2010 - 2060
EUROSTAT 2008
Employment trends in the main subsections of EU-27
Services and Industry, 1998 to 2007
EUROSTAT, STS 2008
Trends: then and now
Emerging psychosocial risks related to OSH:
expert forecast
 The main emerging psychosocial risks
identified were related to five areas:
1. New forms of employment contracts and
job insecurity
2. The OSH risks for the ageing workforce
3. Work intensification - high workload and
work pressure
4. High emotional demands at work,
violence and bullying
5. Poor work-life balance
Workplace and broader issues
 Some of the ultimate causes of (and
solutions to) stress at work lie outside the
immediate workplace
 The interaction of working and private life
causes and effects make joined-up policies
essential

OSH, public health, employment, equal
opportunities, research…
Overall trend: a fragmented future
Fragmented working lives, workplaces and workforces
• Large impact on occupational health and
public health
Overall trend: a fragmented future
Fragmented working lives, workplaces and workforces
 Longer working life (>65), but no longer a job
for life
A challenge for effective health surveillance
 risk of weaker evidence base of harm to
worker health
 Working beyond 65  effects of work-related
diseases become more apparent

Overall trend: a fragmented future
Fragmented working lives, workplaces and workforces




Multiple worksites
Teleworking
Global workplace
ICT: 24/7 availability, workhome spillover

How do we maintain effective prevention?
Overall trend: a fragmented future
Fragmented working lives, workplaces and workforces
 Diversity: more women, migrants, older
workers, workers with disabilities and chronic
illnesses
New risks, and old risks in new guises
 How do we help enterprises to manage this
increased complexity to ensure a healthy
workplace for all?

The challenge for OSH & psychosocial issues
 Fragmented future that needs concerted
action from the OSH community (& beyond)

researchers, practitioners, policy-makers…
 Economic crisis: the temptation of short-term
savings that cause long-term costs
prevention often has immediate & visible costs,
and only long-term & less tangible (or
unmeasured) benefits
 we need new metrics of OSH success

 Demonstrate that a good psychosocial work
environment is a decisive factor for quality,
creativity, innovation, competitiveness…
What do we do next?
 If psychosocial risk management is so good,
why isn’t everybody doing it?
 “Change we can believe in” and “tax cuts for
the middle classes”
 Better practical tools
 Better persuasion tools
Ethical
 Legal
 Business argument (“marketing”): CBA, impact
assessment, cost of “non-quality”

PRIMA-EF: “all of the above”
 Develop existing knowledge
 reviewing available methodologies to evaluate the
prevalence and impact of psychosocial risks at work
 Develop international standards and indicators
 promote harmonisation in the area of psychosocial
risk management and enhance best business
practice
 Develop detailed recommendations and evidencebased best-practice guidance
 promote clarity and a unified European approach
that will enable stakeholders to put these in
practice to improve the quality of working life
 Disseminate the results of the project to
stakeholders and social partners
 raise awareness and promote understanding,
engagement and best practice
What’s going on?: European survey of
enterprises
 Covering all 27 Member States (+)
 Enterprises (>10 employees) in both public and
private sectors
 Interviewing managers and staff representatives
 How do enterprises actually manage OSH &
psychosocial risks?
 What are the drivers for action? Barriers?
 What are their information needs?
 How can they be supported to take better
preventive action?
RESULTS: Mid-2009
Thank you for your attention
Eusebio Rial González
European Agency for Safety and Health at Work
[email protected]
http://osha.europa.eu
http://riskobservatory.osha.europa.eu