China Daily Global Edition (USA)

A special day for safety and health of workers

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Aswe observeWor­ld Day for Safety and Health atWork on Friday, latest Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on estimates show that 1.4 million work-related deaths occur annually in Asia and the Pacific out of the 2.3 million worldwide. This means the region accounted for 70 percent of the global fatal occupation­al accidents and 60 percent of the work-related fatal diseases.

Most work-related deaths and non-fatal accidents occur in low- and middle-income countries of the region. However, in reality, the situation in the Asia-Pacific region could be even worse as the problem can only be estimated due to the lack of data.

Challenges in collecting occupation­al safety and health data that is accurate, comparable and timely hinder the analysis of scope, nature, causes and impact of occupation­al accidents and disease. Official reporting requiremen­ts are based on multiple criteria which change over time and do not cover all categories of workers (such as self-employed and informal workers).

In fact, no country reports all work-related diseases. Even countries with well-establishe­d reporting practices often do not report all cases, particular­ly non-fatal injuries or occupation­al diseases. Therefore, official figures provide only a partial assessment of the situation which can be only estimated.

Yet such informatio­n and analysis is pivotal to devising effective and evidence-based policies and preventive measures both at country and enterprise levels. Improved occupation­al safety and health (OSH) data can help secure working environmen­ts for all workers. They drawattent­ion to high-risk activities and most vulnerable categories of workers, and enable labor inspectora­tes to carry out their preventive mandate by giving countries the means to monitor and assess the needs for and the impact of their OSH policies.

Over the past century, measures have been developed to improve OSH reporting and newtechnol­ogies can facilitate access to timely sources of informatio­n on occupation­al safety and health data.

The ILOand its member states started to work on improving OSH data comparabil­ity in 1923, when industrial accident statistics were placed on the agenda of the First Internatio­nal Conference of Labour Statistici­ans. Moreover, ILOOccupat­ional Safety andHealth Convention­s require ratifying member states to establish mechanisms to collect reliable OSH data and the ILOhas also developed tools to support this work.

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t calls on countries to collect, utilize and report OSH data as a means to measure progress in protecting labor rights and promoting safe and secure working environmen­ts for all workers. Countries have the primary responsibi­lity for follow-up and reviewof the progress made in implementi­ng the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, which will require quality and accessible data collection. And regional follow-up and reviewwill be based on national-level analyses and contribute to follow-up and reviewat the global level.

The ILOworks to promote a culture of prevention on OSH to protect all workers’ health and lives. It can be achieved with the joint commitment of government­s, workers and employers, and with accurate, comparable and timely data.

It can be achieved with the joint commitment of government­s, workers and employers, and with accurate, comparable and timely data.

The author is Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on’s senior specialist in occupation­al safety and health for Asia.

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