Works Management - For News and Suppliers of Plant & Manufacturers Services
 
   
Search :   Search Help    login

Call for free occupational health care 02/07/2008
 
A call went out today (2 July), for occupational health advice to be made free to everyone of working age at the point of delivery.

The Society of Occupational Medicine says that at the moment only about a third of the UK workforce has access to occupational health services and these were usually paid for by the employer. GPs acknowledge that they don’t have the skills to assess complex health and work issues and struggle with the ethical and medical problems around issuing sick-notes.

The recent government review undertaken by Dame Carol Black into the health of the working age population – Working for a Healthier Tomorrow – found that ill health in the working population was costing the country £100 billion a year and that around 175 million working days were lost to sickness in 2006.

“If an employee is off sick, or struggling to stay at work because of their health, or has actually lost a job through illness or injury, the people who have the skills and the power to help them don’t work in any kind of ‘joined-up’ way,” said Society president Dr Gordon Parker.

Occupational health – the provision of medical advice about health and work – was excluded from the NHS 60 years ago, and has remained largely on the fringes ever since.
 
Author
Ken Hurst
 
Email this article
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  UK mill shipped to Ukraine
 
  WEEE anniversary brings penalty warning
 
  Fatal injuries maintain five year average
 
  Law gets tough on H&S offences
 
  Defra urges REACH registration
 
 
News Item
Similar Features Directory Articles
 
  Box clever to minimise waste