Author
Listed:
- Mane
- Kumar Mishra
- Sekhar Patro
- B.Mane
Abstract
Long-term health effects of occupational safety measures are very important for figuring out how well they work at keeping workers from getting hurt or sick on the job. This study looks into what happens when different safety rules are put in place across many businesses over a long length of time. By looking at a lot of old information, like health records and safety compliance reports, the study finds patterns in how health improved at work after safety measures were put in place. There is a much higher chance of job dangers in fields like manufacturing, building, healthcare, and agriculture that are part of the study. Personal protective equipment (PPE), ergonomic changes, safety training programs, and regulatory compliance measures are some of the most important safety interventions that were looked at. There are both qualitative and quantitative methods used in the process. It is done using a longitudinal group study methodology, which lets health effects be tracked over time. Some of the health outcomes that are looked at are the number of musculoskeletal disorders, respiratory disorders, mental health problems, and deaths from injuries. A mixed-methods technique was used, which included expert conversations, worker comments, and statistical analysis. Chi-square tests, regression models, and survival analysis are used in the statistical analysis to look at the link between safety interventions and health outcomes. The results show that the number of injuries and illnesses related to work is significantly lower in sectors with strong safety measures compared to those with few or no interventions. Musculoskeletal disorders went down by 30% when ergonomic programs were put in place in manufacturing, and stress-related disorders went down by 25% when mental health programs were put in place in healthcare. Safety training programs have also helped bring down the number of fatal accidents in high-risk industries.
Suggested Citation
Handle:
RePEc:dbk:health:v:2:y:2023:i::p:236:id:236
DOI: 10.56294/hl2023236
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