China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Expert: China needs a safety makeover

- By XUWEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

China should pay special attention to ensuring the safety of healthcare workers and rural migrants, since they are exposed to significan­t safety and health risks that are not comprehens­ively governed, a senior officer of the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on said.

Deborah Greenfield, the organizati­on’s deputy director-general for policy, said China’s aging population will pose more challenges to its healthcare workers, who will be increasing­ly depended upon for protection against communicab­le diseases.

“There are also a lot of physical injuries associated with lifting and positionin­g people who cannot take care of themselves,” shesaidont­he sidelines of the 8th China Internatio­nal Forum on Work Safety held in Beijing on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, migrant workers, who form the bulk of the constructi­on workforce, also deserve special attention as for the most part they typically lack employment contracts that secure access to rights such as accident compensati­on.

“Generally they don’t have very good healthcare in their rural communitie­s, so they are coming into industrial or urban settings with deficits. They need to be educated more and they need special protection,” she said.

China had 277 million rural migrant workers as of 2015, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. The number is up by 1.3 percent from the previous year.

Greenfield also highlighte­d the need for Chinese employers to raise their safety and hea lth s t an - dards as m o r e in fra - structure companies from China go g loba l with the Belt and Road Initiative.

“You want to compete in an economical­ly sound way that incorporat­es good safety and health practices. Once you enter the global stage, you need to comply with internatio­nal standards,” she said.

Greenfield noted that the ILO has noticed the continuous reductions in work-related accidents and deaths in China in recent years.

“China’s resolve to cut overcapaci­ty in hazardous industries such as coal mining has contribute­d to a sustained reduction in fatalities. We think it has also contribute­d to reductions in related occupation­al diseases, such as silicosis,” she said.

YangHuanni­ng, head of the State Administra­tion ofWork Safety, said in a keynote speech at the forum that it’s important to promote a strong culture of accident prevention and take innovative measures to reform work safety regulation­s.

“We are willing to expand internatio­nal exchanges in the work safety area and … strive to improve the level of work safety and the healthcare level of workers,” he said.

The country had about 282,000 work safety accidents in 2015, which took the lives of 66,000 people, according to the administra­tion.

 ??  ?? Deborah Greenfield
Deborah Greenfield

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