Occupational Health Services in eleven countries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

Occupational Health Services in eleven countries

Description:

Occupational Health Services in UK (Lawrence Waterman) ... UK (Lawrence Waterman) - Workplace Health Connect programme (HSE 2005) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:97
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: peterwes
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Occupational Health Services in eleven countries


1
Occupational Health Services in eleven countries
who are they? Contribution to Health for
All? Contribution to business development?
Contribution to an inclusive working life?
Problems ?
  • A survey of Occupational Health Service
    organizations of
  • Austria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Japan, Finland,
    France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, UK
    and UK/Scotland
  • Special Issue of Policy and Practice in Health
    and Safety
  • Chief Editor David Walters
  • Guest Editor Peter Westerholm

2
Occupational Health Services in UK (Lawrence
Waterman)
  • Problem 8 of private sector companies use
    some form of OH support. 2.5 mill. people on
    incapacity benefit in 2005.
  • OH preventive services a patchwork quilt of
    public and private providers with widely varying
    approaches and service quality
  • NHS tasks diagnosis and treatment not
    prevention
  • Strong professional bodies of OH safety and
    health advisers (occupational medicine,
    occupational hygiene etc)
  • Indications of traditional approaches in OH being
    largely ineffective. More of the same not likely
    to improve situation
  • In 2000 key documents of HSC intentions
    Revitalizing health and safety and Securing
    health together demonstrating OH issues of
    central importance and providing basis for
    broad-based, multi-skilled team approach in
    addressing issues such as risk assessment,
    fitness for work and the rehabilitation and
    return to work of workers in ill health
  • In 2001 establishment of Programme Action Group
    to follow up Revitalizing targets
  • Birth of the OH Support model to be described as
    Workplace Health Connect by the HSE

3
UK (Lawrence Waterman) - Workplace Health
Connect programme (HSE 2005)
  • A confidential service designed to give
    free,practical advice on workplace health, safety
    and return to work issues to smaller businesses
    in England and Wales
  • An adviceline and supporting website giving
    tailored practical advice to callers, both
    managers and workers, on workplace health, safety
    and return to work issues
  • A service that aims to transfer of knowledge and
    skills directly to managers and workers enabling
    them to tackle and solve issues themselves
  • Set up in partnership with HSE and based around
    Adviceline/website and problem solving services
    available locally
  • Bottom line messages
  • - OH too important to leave to doctors
  • - Health is not divisible healthcare
    is at its best holistic
  • - To prevent harm is good, to promote
    wellbeing is even better

4
Developments in professional OH - UK
/Scotland(Ewan B. Macdonald Gabe Docherty)
  • Taking the UK government programme Work, Health
    Wellbeing caring for our future one step
    further
  • Scope of OH professionals work tasks widened
    beyond traditional workplace perspective to cover
    all population of working ages
  • National OH Director appointed to implement Work,
    Health and Wellbeing strategies
  • Center for Healthy Working Lives established for
    coordination of OH activities
  • Healthy Working Lives action plans to be
    implemented on a large scale
  • NHS/Scotland to support development of free
    advisory OH services to SMEs in industry
  • Free Workplace visit, confidential Risk
    Assessment, WPHP needs assessment,

5
OHS/The Netherlands development from a
professional to a market market regime (André
Weel Nico Plomp)
  • First period 1920 1980 Medical OH services.
    Drive from large industrial corporations and
    government to arrange medical services for
    workers
  • Second period 1980 1994 Multidisciplinary OH
    services. Services became advisory bodies with an
    enlarged scope of tasks. Legal and economic
    experts on boards of management. Occupational
    physicians, occupational hygienists, safety
    engineers and organizational advisers on service
    teams.
  • Third period 1994 1999 Commercial services.
    Service units transformed into business
    organizations. New commercial OH providers
    emerging and sharp competition on health market.
    Insurance companies and private investors enter
    stage as owners
  • Fourth period 1999 2006 Lost monopolies
    Incentives to invest in rehabilitation and
    prevention strengthened. Return to work
    programmes and sickness absence management in
    demand by client companies.

6
OHS France on the rails from occupational
medicine towards occupational health (Gabriel
Paillereau)
  • Arrangement of access to OHS services at
    compulsory for employers (who pay the costs)
  • Dominant role of OH physician as advisor in all
    OH matters and adaptation or development of
    working conditions.
  • Heavy load of annual medical examinations of all
    employees for assessment of work ability
  • Cardinal changes following a Government decree of
    July 2004
  • - medical examinations reduced to
    examinations every second year
  • - OccupPhysicians dominance challenged in
    introducing a new professional category
    occupational hazard prevention operative
  • - Occupational Health Plan 2005-2009
    implying strengthening of surveillance and
    monitoring functions and establishing new
    administrative central and regional structures
    for these tasks
  • - Planning of regional multidisciplinary
    research centres
  • Transformation has caused and is still causing a
    good deal of heat

7
OHS Finland (Matti Lamberg, Kaj Husman Timo
Leino)- the cornerstones
  • Government development strategy for OHS during
    2002 2015
  • OHS objectives to promote health and work
    capacity, to increase attractiveness of working
    life, to prevent and treat social exclusion and
    to provide functioning services and reasonable
    income security
  • Employers obligation to organise and pay for
    preventive services for all workers. This may be
    done in different ways
  • Employers are reimbursed for up to 50 of
    approved OH service costs from sickness
    reimbursement funds
  • OHS main tasks to prevent work-related illnesses
    and accidents, to raise level of health and
    safety at work, to improve health, working
    ability and functional capacity of employees at
    all stages of their work careers, to promote the
    functioning of the work community
  • Legislative regulation of management and
    surveillance of national plan and subsidiary
    plans addressing vocational training, competence
    development matters and research
  • Finnish OH system based on firm political
    determined commitment

8
OHS Denmark Rise and fall of preventive
services (Anders Kabel, Peter Hasle and
Hans-Jörgen Limborg)
  • Before 2001, OHS organisations/units provided
    services oriented towards OH needs of prevention.
    Basis Employers legal obligation. Structure
    Bipartite management of service units.
    Requirements of competencies and a quality system
    with programme for evaluations
  • After 2001, consequent to post-election change of
    government
  • - obligation of employers to organise OHS
    affiliation annulled
  • - OH surveillance to be enforced by Labour
    Inspectorate issueing notice for improvement.
  • - Notices for improvement may include
    referral to OH service units for assistance in
    complying with requirements of Labour Insp.
  • - Companies with a Danish certificate on
    work environment or British OHSAS 1800 are exempt
    from inspections
  • Earlier OHS units may be authorised to provide
    consulting services on Working Environment
    issues. On market also others offering similar
    type of services.
  • Consequences Significant decrease of OHS service
    units in market and availability of OH
    professionals

9
OHS Sweden - Example of OHS unit Programme
Document- Chief Occup. Physician Johnny
Johnsson, StoraEnso Inc. Forss, Sweden)
  • Prevention of work-related disease and illness
  • Promotion and restitution of health
  • Development of the working environment
  • Improvement of work capacity, motivation and
    performance of staff
  • Supplement jontly with company Safety Dept
  • Support of business activities and strategies for
    Human Resource Management
  • Client orientation and generation of added value
    for the company in general

10
OHS in European countries an ETUC view
(Laurent Vogel)
  • OHS systems of Europe display wide differences in
    legislation and practices
  • From trade union point of view many OHS systems
    do not deliver services matching expectations
    placed on them. Situation sometimes described as
    a Crisis of Confidence
  • Coverage patchy - in most countries well below 60
    - excepting countries with legislative
    requirement for full or almost full coverage (Ex.
    Netherlands, Belgium, France, Finland,
    Luxembourg)
  • Large groups not provided OHS SMEs, workers
    in insecure jobs, unorganized labour etc
  • Multidisciplinarity - only modestly developed.
    Nordics, UK Spain
  • Quality of OH preventive services often
    uncertain. Its surveillance inadequate
  • Reservations regarding OHS professional
    independence
  • Reservations regarding professional competence of
    external consultants and expertise in
    Occupational Health subject matter
  • Reservations regarding collaboration and contacts
    between workers and preventive services

11
OHS Professionalism regardless of setting
  • To have a Health agenda
  • To be evidence-based or, at least,
    evidence-informed, in action and in all
    assessments
  • To be aware of stakeholder expectations
  • To help solve practical problems
  • To communicate on OH issues with management,
    employees and trade unions and with other OH
    professionalsas appropriate
  • To act in alignment to principles of Occupational
    Health ethics
  • To take all opportunities in contacts to a
    life-long learning process
  • To be transparent in all action and asessments

12
The Doctors Leadership Paradox
  • A physician does not really need a boss at all
  • If there should happen to be a boss anyhow, it
    must be another physician
  • Bosses only do un-important, administrative
    things
  • Colleagues who become bosses are no longer real
    physicians
  • However, all physicians want to be bosses and
    have a highly developed sense of hierarchy.
  • Source Chief Physician Carola Lemne MD
  • Hospital Manager of Danderyds University Hospital
    Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm

13
PW_IOSH_Cardiff May 2007
A handshake should not go beyond the
elbow African proverb Quoted by Godfrey B
Tangwa, Yaounde University, Cameroon
14
OHS some features with implications for
professionalism
  • OHS actor in a welfare system of considerable
    complexity with high dependence on other actors
    in concerted efforts
  • Multiple stakeholder scenario in which no
    individual stakeholder is a priori regarded as
    most important of all
  • Challenges on evidence based or research based
    knowledge and insights
  • The three common models of guiding and managing
    human activity hierarchy, market and
    professional networks - exist in parallel
  • Three domaines in co-existence OH
    professionals, management including management
    of OHS organisations and the domain of
    industrial relations. The demarcations of
    accountability and responsibility may become
    blurred all too easy.
  • OHS work carried out in an ethically complex and
    demanding context
  • Health professions globally involved in
    re-negociation of their societal and market
    targeted contracts
  • Well trained graduates of universities pouring
    out and entering all sectors of labour market -
    including the health sector

15
Some determinants of OHS future
  • Commitment and governance of the state with
    regard to OHS?
  • Role models of OHS organisations. Agents of
    public health?, Commercially based organisations
    in a health market?
  • Required competencies of OHS organisations in
    meeting expectations of the state or those of
    clients in the market?
  • Conception of service quality and its development
    in OHS. Whose quality? Quality of
    customers/clients ? Quality as understood by
    health professionals? Quality implying
    cost-efficiency ?
  • Implications of market mechanisms in OHS
    organizations operating as market actors?
  • Strategies for evaluating the effectiveness and
    health impact of OHS?

16
Professionalism is to be visible and to inspire
trust
17
This is it
  • Thank you for your attention !!!
  • Peter Westerholm
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com