|
On
Friday 28 April, government, worker and employer
representatives will observe World Day for Safety and Health with over
100 events worldwide – from the Caucasus to the Caribbean, from
Armenia
to
Addis Ababa
. The special theme of this year’s observance calls attention to
HIV/AIDS as an occupational safety and health issue.
In
Thailand
the ILO is co-organising a publicity event with the Thai Ministry of
Labour and OHSEI (the Asian Workers Institute for Occupational Safety
and Health and the Environment) in Din Daeng,
Bangkok
. About 200 high school
students, workers, regional safety and health experts, and government
officials are expected to take part in an afternoon of speeches,
quizzes and games designed to spread knowledge about practical safety
and health measures.
“The
global epidemic of HIV/AIDS hits hardest those of working age and all
who depend on them”, said ILO Director-General Juan Somavia, in a
statement issued for the World Day. “It threatens their rights at
work. It undermines business and the economy and the very fabric of
society. It is in the interest of all to ensure safe and healthy
workplaces that protect workers from HIV and support those
affected.”
The
ILO estimates that at any given moment, HIV prevents some 2 million
persons from going to work, a figure that is expected to double by
2015.
An ILO report issued for this day highlights the links between decent
work, occupational safety and health and HIV/AIDS. Various elements of
the ILO’s Decent Work Agenda including respect for fundamental
principles and rights at work, its body of international labour
standards, occupational safety and health mechanisms, labour
inspection, codes of practice on occupational safety and health and on
HIV/AIDS and the workplace, and social dialogue provide the basis for
a strong workplace response to both prevention and access to
treatment.
The
observance of World Day for Safety and Health at Work will also
promote awareness of general occupational safety and health issues,
including prevention, in a bid to mobilize action to reduce workplace
fatalities. The ILO estimates that total work related fatalities
number about 2.2 million per year of which some 400,000 are
attributable to the effects of hazardous substances in the workplace.
In addition, some 160 million suffer from work related diseases each
year. This grim toll requires urgent efforts to develop a safety
culture at all levels.
A
number of products will be available from the ILO web page to support
those efforts 1/.
Employers’ and workers’ organizations have a
huge stake in reducing the impact of the HIV pandemic, as it threatens
livelihoods and productivity and the very viability of enterprises as
well as slowing national economic growth. In over 40 countries with
HIV epidemics an average 0.2 per cent of the annual rate of growth of
GDP was lost between 1992 and 2002, equivalent to an annual average of
$25 billion.
The ILO has produced a new CD-ROM for employers to help them
manage HIV/AIDS issues in the workplace 2/.
The world’s trade unions have
long commemorated the victims of occupational accidents and disease on
this day.
For
more information please contact:
Sophy Fisher
Regional Information Officer
ILO –
Bangkok
.
Tel: 02 288 2482

Dr Tsuyoshi Kawakami
OSH
Specialist
Mobile
: 09 939 6891

1/
The link to World Day for Safety and Health at Work home page
and the two reports can be found online at www.ilo.org/public/english/protection/safework/worldday/index.htm.
For a copy of the Director-General’s message, please see: www.ilo.org/public/english/bureau/dgo/speeches/somavia/2006/osh.pdf.
2/
Employers’ Organizations & HIV/AIDS: Information tools
and good practice for workplace action against HIV/AIDS, available in
English, French and Spanish. This CD-ROM aims to help employers’
organizations and their members cope with the impact of HIV/AIDS and
strengthen the business response to the epidemic, particularly the one
of smaller and less well-resourced companies. Organizations of
employers play a critical role in helping the private sector develop
policies and programmes on HIV/AIDS.
For more information, please contact the ILO Department of
Communication and Public information at tel: +4122/799‑7912
or email: communication@ilo.org, or contact ILO offices in your
country or region.
|