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Safety and health at work is everyone’s concern. It’s good for you. It’s good for business.
Gender at work and varying forms of exposure
Elke Schneider, Prevention and Research unit, EU-OSHA
ETUI conference Women´s health and work, 5th March 2015
http://osha.europa.eu
3
European Agency for Safety and
Health at Work (EU-OSHA)
• A body of the EU
• Established in 1996 in Bilbao, Spain
• To promote a culture of risk prevention to improve working
conditions in Europe, by providing technical, scientific and economic
information to serve the needs of those involved in safety and health
at work.
• Tripartite Board bringing together:
- governments, employers’ and workers’ organisations
- the European Commission
http://osha.europa.eu
4
What we do
 Research
• We identify and assess new and emerging risks at work
− e.g. foresight, ESENER (EU survey of enterprises on new and emerging risks)
• We mainstream OSH into other policy areas: public health, research,
environmental protection, transport, education, …
 Prevention
• We collect good practice examples
• We develop hands-on instruments for micro, small and medium-sized
enterprises to help them assess their workplace risks, share knowledge
and good practices on OSH
− OiRA (Online interactive risk assessment)
 Partnership
• We work with and network governments, employers’ and workers’
organisations, EU bodies, networks, and private companies
− e.g. our EU network of national Focal Points
 Campaigning
• We organise major bi-annual EU “Healthy Workplace Campaigns”:
− 2012-2013: Working together for risk prevention
− 2014-2015: Healthy workplaces manage stress
http://osha.europa.eu
5
EU-OSHA mainstreams gender into its research
•Dedicated web section
•Factsheets in 22 languages
•eFacts, reports, for female-dominated sectors,
risks/health problems relevant to women
•Mainstreamed into all our activities (statistics,
surveys, tools, good practice, sectors and
occupations, research about vulnerable groups)
•Included in our campaigns
http://osha.europa.eu/en/priority_groups/gender
http://osha.europa.eu/en/publications/publications-overview?Subject:list=gender
Carries out specific research to provide
reports and tools
◊ Review 2003 on gender issues
◊ Risk assessment factsheets – gender and
diversity
◊ Updated report on trends and issues 2014
◊ Report on mainstreaming tools and policies
2015
◊ Report on gender and age 2015
http://osha.europa.eu
10
Recent trends
 Women still work mainly in services, segregation continues
 Increases in part-time work and mini-jobs, multiple employment
 Increases in employment and activity highest for women aged 55-64
 Older women work more in education, health and social work and public
administration, younger women more in HORECA and retail
 Female workforce ageing in some sectors – manufacturing, agriculture, health care,
education
 Increase in informal work, home/domestic services, difficult access for authorities
 Exposure to violence increasing
 Musculoskeletal disorders and mental health problems increasing
 Women´s access to rehabilitation and back-to-work limited
 Less access to consultation, worker representatives
 Younger and older, migrant women and those in personal services particularly
vulnerable
 Monitoring (accidents & health problems) does still not consider women enough, e.g.
typical accidents in education/health care not considered in statistical analysis
 Huge differences between Member states
 Little gender-specific information on impact of changes (e.g. technology)
http://osha.europa.eu
11
Combined risks - a major issue for women at work
Risk factors, conditions Outcomes
• Exposure to biological & chemical agents
• Working in service sectors
• Working at clients premises
• Jobs not covered by OSH legislation
• Multiple roles
• Lack of information and training
• Low control, autonomy and support
• Prolonged standing and sitting
• Static postures
• Monotonous and repetitive work
• Moving loads repetitively and moving
people
• Client and patient contact
• Infectious diseases
• Skin disorders, asthma
• Stress and mental health problems
• Different accidents: slips, trips and falls,
violence-related, needlestick injuries,
cuts and sprains
• Fatigue and cognitive disorders
• Musculoskeletal disorders
http://osha.europa.eu
12
Gaps in practice - Rehabilitation and disability
Findings and recommendations
 Women with disabilities - at risk of double or triple discrimination.
 Accommodations for women basic or not existent.
 Rehabilitation schemes do not account for women’s needs, e.g. childcare needs during
rehabilitation.
 Employers to be encouraged to have flexible and effective rehabilitation/ back-to-work
policies, addressing female workers, temporary workers and part-timers, often women,
young or migrant workers.
 Pension systems and compensation not adapted.
An example from MS:
 In Sweden, disability pensions are more favourable to men. Women denied pension
when able to do housework, equates to a higher level of well-being, although men are
not assessed on this criterion.
 More research for women on vocational retraining, rehabilitation and re-insertion into
work needed.
 Rehabilitation and back-to-work policies to address women´s distribution of MSDs and
the higher prevalence of mental health disorders.
 Women's work-related health problems leading to longer workplace absences and
critical for reintegration.
http://osha.europa.eu
15
OSH implications of employment trends
Employment trend
 Women more and more
concentrated in part-time
and casual jobs, particularly
in the retail trade and
consumer services sector;
impacts on their salaries and
their career perspectives
 Informal work and jobs in
home care and as cleaners
on the increase, especially for
migrant women
 Move towards mini-jobs, not
covered by labour law
 Women continue to trail men
in terms of career
advancement and in levels of
compensation and gaining
higher status
OSH implications
 Stress & related health problems,
fatigue and cognitive health
problems
 Repetitive strain injuries caused
by repetitive and monotonous work
 Low job control and autonomy,
feelings of low self-esteem, low
motivation, and job dissatisfaction
for women
 OSH difficult to organise for
women who work at their clients
premises, how to enforce, how to
assess risks, how to ensure labour
protection
 Less access to (OSH) training,
consultation, less representation in
decision-making that may influence
their working conditions
http://osha.europa.eu
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Female employment, by sector
60% of all employed
women in 6 out of 62
sectors:
 health care & social
services,
 retail,
 education,
 public administration,
 business activities
 hotels and restaurants
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
16,000
18,000
20,000
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Human health & social work
Wholesale & retail trade
Education
Manufacturing
Public administration
Accommodation & food service
Prof., scientific & technical activities
Agriculture, forestry and fishing
Administrative & support service
Other service activities
Financial and insurance activities
Transportation and storage
Activities of households as
employers
Information and communication
Arts, entertainment and recreation
Construction
Real estate activities
Electricity, gas, steam & air condit.
Water supply; sewerage, waste
managemt
http://osha.europa.eu
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Women and informal work – typical sectors
Sector Vulnerable groups
Occupations
Health and safety risks Specific issues
Agriculture Family workers
Undeclared workers
Young people and children
Temperature and climatic conditions
Pesticides
Accident risks, incl. from vehicles and
machinery
Strenuous work
Seasonal work
Irregular working time
Retail Street retail trade and
markets
Gift shops
Street vendors
Temperature, climatic conditions
Ergonomic risks
“Envelope” wages
Manufacturing Pieced home work
Garment and shoemaking
Tailoring
Accident risks
Poor equipment
Chemical and biological risks
Irregular piece work
Casual work
Hotels and
restaurants
Catering
Kitchen workers
Cleaners
Unskilled workers
MSDs
Noise
Chemical and biological risks
Burns and cuts
Seasonal work
Night work
Irregular working times
“Envelope” wages
Personal
services
Hairdressing
Cleaning
Tailoring
Accounting, data processing
Biological and chemical
Poorly equipped
Casual work
False self-employment
Low wages
Home and
elderly care
Cleaning
Child care
Elderly care
Biological and chemical
MSDs, heavy lifting
Lack of ergonomic equipment and
protective hygiene measures
Irregular working time
Working at clients´ premises
Lone work
Lack of facilities
Mental load
http://osha.europa.eu
19
Characteristics of informal work for women
Vulnerable
groups
Occupations
Health & safety
risks
Specific issues Wider issues
Family workers
Undeclared workers
Young people
Migrant workers
Repetitive & monotonous work
Physically strenuous work
Gendered violence
Lack of access to facilities
Mental load
Accidents & diseases not
recorded and compensated
Lone work
Lack of access to healthcare/
preventive OSH services
Lacking access to preventive
services
Lack of training
No access to consultation
No representation
Lack of basic rights (holidays,
insurance, unemployment
benefits)
Hard & busy schedules
Inadequate rest
Working conditions depend on
the relationship with the
employer
Lack of pension rights
No work contracts or
temporary contracts
Higher poverty risks
Lack of conciliation with
family obligations
Poor career prospects
No social or economic
recognition
Overqualification
Low wages
“Envelope” wages
No access to formal jobs
Social exclusion
Ongoing research on undeclared work and exploitation by FRA, just
presented at EU-OSHA
http://osha.europa.eu
22
OSH implications of living conditions
Living conditions
 Women spend more time in unpaid
activities: childcare and care for
dependent relatives, housework
 Women often juggle multiple roles
– be mothers, partners and carers as
well as doing paid work and running a
household
 Disparity in pay between women
and men still exists. Women
overrepresented in low income, low
status jobs (often part-time), and
more likely to live in poverty
 Poverty, working mainly in the home
on housework and concerns about
personal safety can make women
particularly isolated
OSH implications
 Intensive caring can affect
emotional health, physical health,
social activities and finances
 Stress – particularly when jobs
involve shift work, irregular working
times, Saturday/Sunday and
evening work
 Fatigue and cognitive problems
 Accidents related to fatigue and
bad working conditions
 Musculoskeletal disorders
 Multiple risk factors, not always
easy to discriminate work-related
risks
 Accepting precarious and worse
conditions at work
http://osha.europa.eu
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Care for children or family still main reason for non - or
part-time employment
In Europe, employment gap
between mothers with very young
children (< 3 yrs)) with children in
school age (6 -11 yrs) is on average
26 points for those aged 15 - 24,
and 10 points for those aged 25 - 54
15,6
28,8
12,5
9,8
15,2
0 20 40 60
Retired
In education or training
Own illness or disability
Other family or personal
responsabilities
Looking after children or
incapacitated adults
Main reason for not seeking employment,
by gender, LFS, 2013
Men Women
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Looking after
children or
incapacitated adults
Other family or
personal
responsabilities
Own illness or
disability
In education or
training
Could not find a full-
time job
Other reasons
Main reason for working part-time, women, LFS, 2013
15 years and over
Between 15 and 24 years
Between 25 and 49 years
Between 50 and 64 years
65 years and over
http://osha.europa.eu
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Caring for relatives, not only childcare
 UK :
• 11% rise in the number of carers since 2001 - increasing by over 620,000 to
6.5 million in just 10 years, about one-third are men.
• caring round the clock, for 50 h or more each week, are rising faster - an
increase of 25% in the last ten years
• Consequences: loss in income, physical and mental load, loss of employment
 A UK survey among SMEs showed that 25% had either dealt with a worker
affected by cancer or with a worker with care duties due to a cancer case
 By 2050, Nr. of people over 85 will increase more than fivefold and Europe,
having the oldest population will see a rapid increase in the demand for care.
 BE: 164,789 jobs were created between 2004 and 2011 in the domestic services
sector; in France, 300,000 jobs have been created in the same sector since 2005
 Good practices:
• In Canada, there is a statutory right to compassionate care leave. Employees
can take up to eight weeks unpaid leave to care for a gravely ill family member.
• The Carer's Leave Act 2001 in the Republic of Ireland enables employees to
leave their employment to provide temporary full-time care and attention to a
family member, a partner, friend or colleague.
 Sources: Carers UK, 2014 report, facts and figures; IES, SME survey; NICA, final report
http://osha.europa.eu
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OSH implications of segregation into sectors
Employment trend
 Women still work mainly in
services, while men work mainly in
construction, utilities, transport and
manufacturing
 Increases in activity highest for
women aged 55-64
 Older women work more in
education, health and social work
and public administration
 Employment in manufacturing
decreasing
 Female workforce is ageing in
some sectors – manufacturing,
agriculture
 Women highly represented in
informal work, home and
domestic services
OSH implications
 Different risks for men and women –
prolonged sitting and standing,
static work significant for women
 More client contact – more
harassment and violence
 Different risks for different age
groups – prevention should be
tailored
 Occupational accident rates
stagnating in some sectors, not
recorded for education, health care
and sectors with high rates of
informal work, e.g. agriculture
 Older women exposed to heavy
work
 Less access to training for older
women, less access to consultation,
representation and preventive
services in the informal sector
http://osha.europa.eu
26
Gender segregation by age
OSH implications need to be further investigated
older women
more in health
social work and
education,
younger women
more in retail
and HORECA
Employment in
agriculture is
decreasing
Female
workforce in
manufacturing,
education and
health & social
work is ageing
Source: Eurostat LFS
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
Agriculture Manufacturing Retail Hotels and
restaurants
Public
administration
Education Health & social
work
Women aged 15 - 24, in 1000s, main employment sectors, 2008 and 2013
2008
2013
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
Agriculture Manufacturing Retail Hotels and
restaurants
Public
administration
Education Health & social
work
Women aged 50 - 64, in 1000s, main employment sectors, 2008 and 2013
2008
2013
http://osha.europa.eu
27
Are female jobs light jobs?
Secondary analysis of the German workers survey found that
Health care workers carry more than construction workers
 2 in 3 have to carry heavy loads
(compared to 1 in 2 for construction workers)
 93,8% have to do their work standing
 36% have to work in unfavourable postures (kneeling,
bending, squatting, etc.)
 71% have to do more than one task at a time
 More than ¾ (76%) work shifts
 More than half work nights (51%)
 Almost all work Saturdays, Sundays and holidays (94%, 91,5%)
 57% men and 64 % women have back pain
 66 % women and 54% men have pain in neck and shoulders
 37% of the women have pain in the legs
 > 40% suffer from high emotional load (compared to 11 % on average)
 More than 1 in 4 feel that they hardly cope (27 vs 16.6 %)
 Twice as many as on average have sleeping problems (37% vs. 19%)
(Germany,BAuA survey, published Nov.2007)
http://osha.europa.eu
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Shift (Night) Work: Forecasted Attributable Cancers
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
4,500
2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060
Attributable
registrations
Forecast year
Shift work: breast cancer, women
(1) Current employment levels maintained, 30% <5, 40% 5-
14, 30% 15+ years night shift work
(2) Linear employment trends to 2021-30
(3) 50%<5, 30% 5-14, 20% 15+ years night shift work
(4) 70%<5, 20% 5-14, 10% 15+
(5) 90%<5, 10% 5-14, 0% 15+
(6) 100% <5 years
Shift work reduction – a measure to reduce cancer burden?
EU-OSHA Cancer seminar Sep. 2012
UK burden of disease data (Rushton, L.)
http://osha.europa.eu
29
EU example – integrating gender into age management
Austrian labour inspection campaign on age management at work
Ageing - female health care workers
Finding that training and chances of promotion end at the age of 45;
high work rates, work organisation or working hours and the structure of the work environment
continues to be tailored to younger people.
Projection of the age structure – health and social service - blue-collar workers
Source: Austrian labour inspection service ZAI
2.2
6.3
9
10
15.1
19.7
18
11.8
6.8
1.2
6.8
1.2
2.2
6.3
9
10
15.1
19.7
18
11.8
0
5
10
15
20
25
15-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 55-60 61-65
2007
2016
• 300 enterprises (15/ regional
labour inspectorate) selected for
interventions
•Advice to employers
• employers to assess the age
structure of their workforce
• attempt a projection of
expected changes
• have a plan for addressing
existing and future health
problems
• folders, tools and brochures
developed jointly, practical to
SMEs
http://osha.europa.eu
30
Occupational accidents – gender differences
 Causes and circumstances different due to employment in
different sectors and occupations
• Slips, trips and falls
• Accidents due to violence
 Indications that some types of accidents more frequent in
women working rotating shifts, e.g. health care – influence of
living conditions?
 Accidents in some female-dominated sectors on the rise in
some countries (HORECA – young workers!)
 Some female-dominated sectors (education, health care, public
service) not or insufficiently addressed
 Informal work and mini-jobs – accidents not assessed/recorded
http://osha.europa.eu
31
Women at work - Accident rates generally decreasing, but trends very
different for women and men, depending on sector
 Health care and education previously not included in top accident sectors!
 Informal work – not considered in accident statistics
 Many more women work part-time – adjust for working time
 Commuting accidents important for women
 While accident rates are decreasing for men with age, they are not for women!
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
Manufacturing NACE
D
Electricity, gas and
water supply NACE
E
Construction NACE
F
Wholesale and retail,
repair, NACE G
Hotels and
restaurants NACE H
Transport, storage
and communication
NACE I
Financial
intermediation; real
estate, renting and
business activities
NACE J_K
F 1995 M 1995 F 1996 M 1996 F 1997 M 1997 F 1998 M 1998 F 1999 M 1999 F 2000 M 2000
F 2001 M 2001 F 2002 M 2002 F 2003 M 2003 F 2004 M 2004 F 2005 M 2005 F 2006 M 2006
Standardised incidence rate of accidents at work by economic activity, severity and sex
(per 100 000 workers), EU-15, 1995-2006, ESAW, Eurostat
Men
Women
http://osha.europa.eu
32
Women at work - Accident rates generally decreasing, but
trends very different for women and men, depending on sector
 New NACE coding for industrial sectors reflects better sectors where
accident rates high for female workers
 Accident rates for women relevant in service sectors (transport,
HORECA, waste management, health and social work) and
administrative jobs, and in manufacturing and agriculture
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
4,500
5,000
Transport
& storage
Accommod. &
food services
Admin. &
support
service
Health &
social work
Water supply,
sewerage,
waste man.
Manufacturing Wholesale &
retail trade
Agriculture,
forestry &
fishing
Arts,
entertainment
& recreation
Public
admin.
Real estate Other service
activities
Construction Education
Incidence rate of non-fatal accidents, by gender, ESAW, 2008-2011
Males 2008 Females 2008 Males 2009 Females 2009
Males 2010 Females 2010 Males 2011 Females 2011
http://osha.europa.eu
33
Transport accidents – by gender
A much higher injury risk for women
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
work trips commuting transport
accidents total
5.749
35.955
16.902
12.521
69.796
44.394
injured
/
1
milliom
hours
type of journey
men
women
Source „Initiative Sicherer Arbeitsweg - Weinheim 2011 - Dr. Geiler“
• Commercial traffic is riskier
than general traffic
• Commuting more dangerous
than business routes
• Modal choice strongly
relevant-for example highest
risk for motorcycles,
pedestrians, cyclists, and
emergency services
• Women are at higher risk of
injury
• Risk decreases with age
• Depends on times of day,
seasons relevant
http://osha.europa.eu
34
Women’s exposure to dangerous substances
remains largely unexplored
Substance Source Circumstances Occupation, task
Pesticides & storage
chemicals
Foodstuff
Storage
Plants
Animals
• Agriculture and
farming
• Horticulture
• Workers who handle
goods from
containers and in
storage areas
• Farmers &
agricultural workers
• Gardeners
• Retail
• Cleaners
Exhaust fumes
Diesel exhaust and
particles
Exhaust from
combustion engine,
incl. diesel and other
engines on trucks,
ships, trains and
buses
• Unintentional contact
when loading and
unloading
• Maintenance
• Refuelling
• Parking areas of
vehicles
• Maintenance
workers
• Retail workers
• Drivers, delivery
and cargo workers
• Workers on mission
• Transport workers
• Emergency workers
http://osha.europa.eu
35
Women’s exposure to dangerous substances
remains largely unexplored
Substance Source Circumstances Occupation, task
Solvents
Cleaning products
Fuels
Ambient air
Paints, inks, glues and
varnishes
Cosmetics
Resins and glues
Drugs
Cleaning
Dry-cleaning of textiles
Printing
Laboratory work
Handling medication
Fabrication of dental and
optometric devices
Manufacturing
Leather industry
Textile industry
Cleaners and dry-cleaners
Hairdressers
Service workers on ships, trains,
buses
Printing
Laboratory work, pharmacists,
chemists
Biological and
infectious agents
Animals
Foodstuffs, perishable
goods
Insects and other vectors
Contact with
passengers, patients,
clients
Cleaning
Contact with foodstuffs
Contact with infected clients
and goods
Contact with animals
Cuts and stings
Contact with infectious agents
when travelling abroad
Farmers and agricultural workers
Cleaners
Service and maintenance
workers
Healthcare staff
Hairdressers
Catering staff
Teachers and nursery school
workers
Retail workers
Home care
http://osha.europa.eu
36
EU-OSHA publications highlighting chemical and biological
risks to women
Combined exposures!
! Monitoring of cancer risk factors and work-related cancer: exposures to
women overlooked, part-time women excluded from some studies
 Noise in figures – OSH in figures report
– highlights exposures in food and textile manufacturing, education, health
care and other service professions
 Combined exposures to noise and ototoxic substances – literature
review
 Transport sector – OSH in figures report – highlights overlooked
exposures to women in general, in particular women in service tasks
(restauration, cleaning)
 Factsheets on respiratory and skin sensitisers, highlight exposures to
biological agents in service sectors, health care, etc.
 Reports on cleaners – highlight exposures to precarious workers and lack of
training and information
 Report on HORECA and efacts on Dangerous substances in HORECA –
highlights multiple exposures and lack of information
 Legionella and legionnaires’ disease: European policies and good
practices, Report and Factsheet 100
http://osha.europa.eu
37
Women at work – younger women
Employment trend
 Unemployment gap betw. young
men and women has clearly
diminished, in some countries
unemployment of young men has
even become slightly higher.
 Younger women work more in
retail and HORECA
 Younger women work more in low-
qualified jobs and on temporary
contracts
 Gender pay gap already at the start
of career
 Employment gap particularly high
for mothers aged 15 - 24 with very
young and with children in school
age
OSH implications
 Different risks and trends for
different age groups – prevention
should be tailored
 Lack of experience and training of
young women
 Younger women exposed to sexual
harassment
 High exposure to violence, due to
client contact
 Occupational accidents even
increasing in some countries in
female-dominated sectors, such as
HORECA
 Less access to consulation,
preventive services,
representation at enterprise level
 Young mothers a particularly
vulnerable group
http://osha.europa.eu
39
EU example - integrating gender in the work of labour inspection
Austrian labour inspection Gender Mainstreaming Policy
 Improved compliance – benefits women and men
 Inspectors responsibility to set the right climate. How can they
influence: the workplace level – broader prevention level
 Integrated into national OSH strategy – gender budgeting
 Austrian Inspectorate gender mainstreaming project
• Mainstream gender into the working lives of inspectors-
helps to raise awareness
• Mainstream gender into daily work of inspectors
• Guidelines for inspectors – always speak to both men and
women – checklists, does my advice cover both women and
men? will my advice benefit men and women?
• Training for inspectors
• Gender focus in guides for cleaners, investigation on female
musicians, gender mainstreamed into actions for ageing
workers
The labour inspection staff act..
..considering the different situation of women and men in a working enviroment and
.. regarding to the fact, that OSH measures should be gender-sensitive
Presentation available at
https://osha.europa.eu/en/seminars/seminar-on-women-at-work-raising-the-profile-of-women-and-occupational-safety-and-health-osh
http://osha.europa.eu
40
https://osha.europa.eu/en/publications/factsheets/87
http://osha.europa.eu
41
Gender mainstreaming
Developing risk assessment tools
 Mainstreaming, gender-sensitivity means:
ensuring both women and men are included
in all h&s activities and doing a ‘gender-
check’
 EU-OSHA factsheet 43 provides a basic
approach:
• Avoid assumptions of who is at risk
• Include women’s jobs and consult them
• Look at real work situations
• Match jobs, equipment to real people
• Include work-life balance
• Incorporate into a holistic approach
 Examples of practical tools and their
application needsharing
http://osha.europa.eu/en/publications/factsheets/43/view
http://osha.europa.eu
44
http://www.inail.it/Portale/appmanager/portale/desktop?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=PAGE_PUBBLICAZIONI&nextPage=PU
BBLICAZIONI/Tutti_i_titoli/Pari_opportunita/Donne_al_lavoro/Donne_al_lavoro_-_Sommario/info-753369618.jsp
Look at the real jobs women do!
http://osha.europa.eu
45
http://osha.europa.eu/en/priority_groups/gender
Thank you for your attention

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1-Elke Scneider.pptx

  • 1. Safety and health at work is everyone’s concern. It’s good for you. It’s good for business. Gender at work and varying forms of exposure Elke Schneider, Prevention and Research unit, EU-OSHA ETUI conference Women´s health and work, 5th March 2015
  • 2. http://osha.europa.eu 3 European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (EU-OSHA) • A body of the EU • Established in 1996 in Bilbao, Spain • To promote a culture of risk prevention to improve working conditions in Europe, by providing technical, scientific and economic information to serve the needs of those involved in safety and health at work. • Tripartite Board bringing together: - governments, employers’ and workers’ organisations - the European Commission
  • 3. http://osha.europa.eu 4 What we do  Research • We identify and assess new and emerging risks at work − e.g. foresight, ESENER (EU survey of enterprises on new and emerging risks) • We mainstream OSH into other policy areas: public health, research, environmental protection, transport, education, …  Prevention • We collect good practice examples • We develop hands-on instruments for micro, small and medium-sized enterprises to help them assess their workplace risks, share knowledge and good practices on OSH − OiRA (Online interactive risk assessment)  Partnership • We work with and network governments, employers’ and workers’ organisations, EU bodies, networks, and private companies − e.g. our EU network of national Focal Points  Campaigning • We organise major bi-annual EU “Healthy Workplace Campaigns”: − 2012-2013: Working together for risk prevention − 2014-2015: Healthy workplaces manage stress
  • 4. http://osha.europa.eu 5 EU-OSHA mainstreams gender into its research •Dedicated web section •Factsheets in 22 languages •eFacts, reports, for female-dominated sectors, risks/health problems relevant to women •Mainstreamed into all our activities (statistics, surveys, tools, good practice, sectors and occupations, research about vulnerable groups) •Included in our campaigns http://osha.europa.eu/en/priority_groups/gender http://osha.europa.eu/en/publications/publications-overview?Subject:list=gender Carries out specific research to provide reports and tools ◊ Review 2003 on gender issues ◊ Risk assessment factsheets – gender and diversity ◊ Updated report on trends and issues 2014 ◊ Report on mainstreaming tools and policies 2015 ◊ Report on gender and age 2015
  • 5. http://osha.europa.eu 10 Recent trends  Women still work mainly in services, segregation continues  Increases in part-time work and mini-jobs, multiple employment  Increases in employment and activity highest for women aged 55-64  Older women work more in education, health and social work and public administration, younger women more in HORECA and retail  Female workforce ageing in some sectors – manufacturing, agriculture, health care, education  Increase in informal work, home/domestic services, difficult access for authorities  Exposure to violence increasing  Musculoskeletal disorders and mental health problems increasing  Women´s access to rehabilitation and back-to-work limited  Less access to consultation, worker representatives  Younger and older, migrant women and those in personal services particularly vulnerable  Monitoring (accidents & health problems) does still not consider women enough, e.g. typical accidents in education/health care not considered in statistical analysis  Huge differences between Member states  Little gender-specific information on impact of changes (e.g. technology)
  • 6. http://osha.europa.eu 11 Combined risks - a major issue for women at work Risk factors, conditions Outcomes • Exposure to biological & chemical agents • Working in service sectors • Working at clients premises • Jobs not covered by OSH legislation • Multiple roles • Lack of information and training • Low control, autonomy and support • Prolonged standing and sitting • Static postures • Monotonous and repetitive work • Moving loads repetitively and moving people • Client and patient contact • Infectious diseases • Skin disorders, asthma • Stress and mental health problems • Different accidents: slips, trips and falls, violence-related, needlestick injuries, cuts and sprains • Fatigue and cognitive disorders • Musculoskeletal disorders
  • 7. http://osha.europa.eu 12 Gaps in practice - Rehabilitation and disability Findings and recommendations  Women with disabilities - at risk of double or triple discrimination.  Accommodations for women basic or not existent.  Rehabilitation schemes do not account for women’s needs, e.g. childcare needs during rehabilitation.  Employers to be encouraged to have flexible and effective rehabilitation/ back-to-work policies, addressing female workers, temporary workers and part-timers, often women, young or migrant workers.  Pension systems and compensation not adapted. An example from MS:  In Sweden, disability pensions are more favourable to men. Women denied pension when able to do housework, equates to a higher level of well-being, although men are not assessed on this criterion.  More research for women on vocational retraining, rehabilitation and re-insertion into work needed.  Rehabilitation and back-to-work policies to address women´s distribution of MSDs and the higher prevalence of mental health disorders.  Women's work-related health problems leading to longer workplace absences and critical for reintegration.
  • 8. http://osha.europa.eu 15 OSH implications of employment trends Employment trend  Women more and more concentrated in part-time and casual jobs, particularly in the retail trade and consumer services sector; impacts on their salaries and their career perspectives  Informal work and jobs in home care and as cleaners on the increase, especially for migrant women  Move towards mini-jobs, not covered by labour law  Women continue to trail men in terms of career advancement and in levels of compensation and gaining higher status OSH implications  Stress & related health problems, fatigue and cognitive health problems  Repetitive strain injuries caused by repetitive and monotonous work  Low job control and autonomy, feelings of low self-esteem, low motivation, and job dissatisfaction for women  OSH difficult to organise for women who work at their clients premises, how to enforce, how to assess risks, how to ensure labour protection  Less access to (OSH) training, consultation, less representation in decision-making that may influence their working conditions
  • 9. http://osha.europa.eu 16 Female employment, by sector 60% of all employed women in 6 out of 62 sectors:  health care & social services,  retail,  education,  public administration,  business activities  hotels and restaurants 0 2,000 4,000 6,000 8,000 10,000 12,000 14,000 16,000 18,000 20,000 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Human health & social work Wholesale & retail trade Education Manufacturing Public administration Accommodation & food service Prof., scientific & technical activities Agriculture, forestry and fishing Administrative & support service Other service activities Financial and insurance activities Transportation and storage Activities of households as employers Information and communication Arts, entertainment and recreation Construction Real estate activities Electricity, gas, steam & air condit. Water supply; sewerage, waste managemt
  • 10. http://osha.europa.eu 18 Women and informal work – typical sectors Sector Vulnerable groups Occupations Health and safety risks Specific issues Agriculture Family workers Undeclared workers Young people and children Temperature and climatic conditions Pesticides Accident risks, incl. from vehicles and machinery Strenuous work Seasonal work Irregular working time Retail Street retail trade and markets Gift shops Street vendors Temperature, climatic conditions Ergonomic risks “Envelope” wages Manufacturing Pieced home work Garment and shoemaking Tailoring Accident risks Poor equipment Chemical and biological risks Irregular piece work Casual work Hotels and restaurants Catering Kitchen workers Cleaners Unskilled workers MSDs Noise Chemical and biological risks Burns and cuts Seasonal work Night work Irregular working times “Envelope” wages Personal services Hairdressing Cleaning Tailoring Accounting, data processing Biological and chemical Poorly equipped Casual work False self-employment Low wages Home and elderly care Cleaning Child care Elderly care Biological and chemical MSDs, heavy lifting Lack of ergonomic equipment and protective hygiene measures Irregular working time Working at clients´ premises Lone work Lack of facilities Mental load
  • 11. http://osha.europa.eu 19 Characteristics of informal work for women Vulnerable groups Occupations Health & safety risks Specific issues Wider issues Family workers Undeclared workers Young people Migrant workers Repetitive & monotonous work Physically strenuous work Gendered violence Lack of access to facilities Mental load Accidents & diseases not recorded and compensated Lone work Lack of access to healthcare/ preventive OSH services Lacking access to preventive services Lack of training No access to consultation No representation Lack of basic rights (holidays, insurance, unemployment benefits) Hard & busy schedules Inadequate rest Working conditions depend on the relationship with the employer Lack of pension rights No work contracts or temporary contracts Higher poverty risks Lack of conciliation with family obligations Poor career prospects No social or economic recognition Overqualification Low wages “Envelope” wages No access to formal jobs Social exclusion Ongoing research on undeclared work and exploitation by FRA, just presented at EU-OSHA
  • 12. http://osha.europa.eu 22 OSH implications of living conditions Living conditions  Women spend more time in unpaid activities: childcare and care for dependent relatives, housework  Women often juggle multiple roles – be mothers, partners and carers as well as doing paid work and running a household  Disparity in pay between women and men still exists. Women overrepresented in low income, low status jobs (often part-time), and more likely to live in poverty  Poverty, working mainly in the home on housework and concerns about personal safety can make women particularly isolated OSH implications  Intensive caring can affect emotional health, physical health, social activities and finances  Stress – particularly when jobs involve shift work, irregular working times, Saturday/Sunday and evening work  Fatigue and cognitive problems  Accidents related to fatigue and bad working conditions  Musculoskeletal disorders  Multiple risk factors, not always easy to discriminate work-related risks  Accepting precarious and worse conditions at work
  • 13. http://osha.europa.eu 23 Care for children or family still main reason for non - or part-time employment In Europe, employment gap between mothers with very young children (< 3 yrs)) with children in school age (6 -11 yrs) is on average 26 points for those aged 15 - 24, and 10 points for those aged 25 - 54 15,6 28,8 12,5 9,8 15,2 0 20 40 60 Retired In education or training Own illness or disability Other family or personal responsabilities Looking after children or incapacitated adults Main reason for not seeking employment, by gender, LFS, 2013 Men Women 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Looking after children or incapacitated adults Other family or personal responsabilities Own illness or disability In education or training Could not find a full- time job Other reasons Main reason for working part-time, women, LFS, 2013 15 years and over Between 15 and 24 years Between 25 and 49 years Between 50 and 64 years 65 years and over
  • 14. http://osha.europa.eu 24 Caring for relatives, not only childcare  UK : • 11% rise in the number of carers since 2001 - increasing by over 620,000 to 6.5 million in just 10 years, about one-third are men. • caring round the clock, for 50 h or more each week, are rising faster - an increase of 25% in the last ten years • Consequences: loss in income, physical and mental load, loss of employment  A UK survey among SMEs showed that 25% had either dealt with a worker affected by cancer or with a worker with care duties due to a cancer case  By 2050, Nr. of people over 85 will increase more than fivefold and Europe, having the oldest population will see a rapid increase in the demand for care.  BE: 164,789 jobs were created between 2004 and 2011 in the domestic services sector; in France, 300,000 jobs have been created in the same sector since 2005  Good practices: • In Canada, there is a statutory right to compassionate care leave. Employees can take up to eight weeks unpaid leave to care for a gravely ill family member. • The Carer's Leave Act 2001 in the Republic of Ireland enables employees to leave their employment to provide temporary full-time care and attention to a family member, a partner, friend or colleague.  Sources: Carers UK, 2014 report, facts and figures; IES, SME survey; NICA, final report
  • 15. http://osha.europa.eu 25 OSH implications of segregation into sectors Employment trend  Women still work mainly in services, while men work mainly in construction, utilities, transport and manufacturing  Increases in activity highest for women aged 55-64  Older women work more in education, health and social work and public administration  Employment in manufacturing decreasing  Female workforce is ageing in some sectors – manufacturing, agriculture  Women highly represented in informal work, home and domestic services OSH implications  Different risks for men and women – prolonged sitting and standing, static work significant for women  More client contact – more harassment and violence  Different risks for different age groups – prevention should be tailored  Occupational accident rates stagnating in some sectors, not recorded for education, health care and sectors with high rates of informal work, e.g. agriculture  Older women exposed to heavy work  Less access to training for older women, less access to consultation, representation and preventive services in the informal sector
  • 16. http://osha.europa.eu 26 Gender segregation by age OSH implications need to be further investigated older women more in health social work and education, younger women more in retail and HORECA Employment in agriculture is decreasing Female workforce in manufacturing, education and health & social work is ageing Source: Eurostat LFS 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 Agriculture Manufacturing Retail Hotels and restaurants Public administration Education Health & social work Women aged 15 - 24, in 1000s, main employment sectors, 2008 and 2013 2008 2013 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 Agriculture Manufacturing Retail Hotels and restaurants Public administration Education Health & social work Women aged 50 - 64, in 1000s, main employment sectors, 2008 and 2013 2008 2013
  • 17. http://osha.europa.eu 27 Are female jobs light jobs? Secondary analysis of the German workers survey found that Health care workers carry more than construction workers  2 in 3 have to carry heavy loads (compared to 1 in 2 for construction workers)  93,8% have to do their work standing  36% have to work in unfavourable postures (kneeling, bending, squatting, etc.)  71% have to do more than one task at a time  More than ¾ (76%) work shifts  More than half work nights (51%)  Almost all work Saturdays, Sundays and holidays (94%, 91,5%)  57% men and 64 % women have back pain  66 % women and 54% men have pain in neck and shoulders  37% of the women have pain in the legs  > 40% suffer from high emotional load (compared to 11 % on average)  More than 1 in 4 feel that they hardly cope (27 vs 16.6 %)  Twice as many as on average have sleeping problems (37% vs. 19%) (Germany,BAuA survey, published Nov.2007)
  • 18. http://osha.europa.eu 28 Shift (Night) Work: Forecasted Attributable Cancers 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060 Attributable registrations Forecast year Shift work: breast cancer, women (1) Current employment levels maintained, 30% <5, 40% 5- 14, 30% 15+ years night shift work (2) Linear employment trends to 2021-30 (3) 50%<5, 30% 5-14, 20% 15+ years night shift work (4) 70%<5, 20% 5-14, 10% 15+ (5) 90%<5, 10% 5-14, 0% 15+ (6) 100% <5 years Shift work reduction – a measure to reduce cancer burden? EU-OSHA Cancer seminar Sep. 2012 UK burden of disease data (Rushton, L.)
  • 19. http://osha.europa.eu 29 EU example – integrating gender into age management Austrian labour inspection campaign on age management at work Ageing - female health care workers Finding that training and chances of promotion end at the age of 45; high work rates, work organisation or working hours and the structure of the work environment continues to be tailored to younger people. Projection of the age structure – health and social service - blue-collar workers Source: Austrian labour inspection service ZAI 2.2 6.3 9 10 15.1 19.7 18 11.8 6.8 1.2 6.8 1.2 2.2 6.3 9 10 15.1 19.7 18 11.8 0 5 10 15 20 25 15-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 55-60 61-65 2007 2016 • 300 enterprises (15/ regional labour inspectorate) selected for interventions •Advice to employers • employers to assess the age structure of their workforce • attempt a projection of expected changes • have a plan for addressing existing and future health problems • folders, tools and brochures developed jointly, practical to SMEs
  • 20. http://osha.europa.eu 30 Occupational accidents – gender differences  Causes and circumstances different due to employment in different sectors and occupations • Slips, trips and falls • Accidents due to violence  Indications that some types of accidents more frequent in women working rotating shifts, e.g. health care – influence of living conditions?  Accidents in some female-dominated sectors on the rise in some countries (HORECA – young workers!)  Some female-dominated sectors (education, health care, public service) not or insufficiently addressed  Informal work and mini-jobs – accidents not assessed/recorded
  • 21. http://osha.europa.eu 31 Women at work - Accident rates generally decreasing, but trends very different for women and men, depending on sector  Health care and education previously not included in top accident sectors!  Informal work – not considered in accident statistics  Many more women work part-time – adjust for working time  Commuting accidents important for women  While accident rates are decreasing for men with age, they are not for women! 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 Manufacturing NACE D Electricity, gas and water supply NACE E Construction NACE F Wholesale and retail, repair, NACE G Hotels and restaurants NACE H Transport, storage and communication NACE I Financial intermediation; real estate, renting and business activities NACE J_K F 1995 M 1995 F 1996 M 1996 F 1997 M 1997 F 1998 M 1998 F 1999 M 1999 F 2000 M 2000 F 2001 M 2001 F 2002 M 2002 F 2003 M 2003 F 2004 M 2004 F 2005 M 2005 F 2006 M 2006 Standardised incidence rate of accidents at work by economic activity, severity and sex (per 100 000 workers), EU-15, 1995-2006, ESAW, Eurostat Men Women
  • 22. http://osha.europa.eu 32 Women at work - Accident rates generally decreasing, but trends very different for women and men, depending on sector  New NACE coding for industrial sectors reflects better sectors where accident rates high for female workers  Accident rates for women relevant in service sectors (transport, HORECA, waste management, health and social work) and administrative jobs, and in manufacturing and agriculture 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 4,000 4,500 5,000 Transport & storage Accommod. & food services Admin. & support service Health & social work Water supply, sewerage, waste man. Manufacturing Wholesale & retail trade Agriculture, forestry & fishing Arts, entertainment & recreation Public admin. Real estate Other service activities Construction Education Incidence rate of non-fatal accidents, by gender, ESAW, 2008-2011 Males 2008 Females 2008 Males 2009 Females 2009 Males 2010 Females 2010 Males 2011 Females 2011
  • 23. http://osha.europa.eu 33 Transport accidents – by gender A much higher injury risk for women 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 work trips commuting transport accidents total 5.749 35.955 16.902 12.521 69.796 44.394 injured / 1 milliom hours type of journey men women Source „Initiative Sicherer Arbeitsweg - Weinheim 2011 - Dr. Geiler“ • Commercial traffic is riskier than general traffic • Commuting more dangerous than business routes • Modal choice strongly relevant-for example highest risk for motorcycles, pedestrians, cyclists, and emergency services • Women are at higher risk of injury • Risk decreases with age • Depends on times of day, seasons relevant
  • 24. http://osha.europa.eu 34 Women’s exposure to dangerous substances remains largely unexplored Substance Source Circumstances Occupation, task Pesticides & storage chemicals Foodstuff Storage Plants Animals • Agriculture and farming • Horticulture • Workers who handle goods from containers and in storage areas • Farmers & agricultural workers • Gardeners • Retail • Cleaners Exhaust fumes Diesel exhaust and particles Exhaust from combustion engine, incl. diesel and other engines on trucks, ships, trains and buses • Unintentional contact when loading and unloading • Maintenance • Refuelling • Parking areas of vehicles • Maintenance workers • Retail workers • Drivers, delivery and cargo workers • Workers on mission • Transport workers • Emergency workers
  • 25. http://osha.europa.eu 35 Women’s exposure to dangerous substances remains largely unexplored Substance Source Circumstances Occupation, task Solvents Cleaning products Fuels Ambient air Paints, inks, glues and varnishes Cosmetics Resins and glues Drugs Cleaning Dry-cleaning of textiles Printing Laboratory work Handling medication Fabrication of dental and optometric devices Manufacturing Leather industry Textile industry Cleaners and dry-cleaners Hairdressers Service workers on ships, trains, buses Printing Laboratory work, pharmacists, chemists Biological and infectious agents Animals Foodstuffs, perishable goods Insects and other vectors Contact with passengers, patients, clients Cleaning Contact with foodstuffs Contact with infected clients and goods Contact with animals Cuts and stings Contact with infectious agents when travelling abroad Farmers and agricultural workers Cleaners Service and maintenance workers Healthcare staff Hairdressers Catering staff Teachers and nursery school workers Retail workers Home care
  • 26. http://osha.europa.eu 36 EU-OSHA publications highlighting chemical and biological risks to women Combined exposures! ! Monitoring of cancer risk factors and work-related cancer: exposures to women overlooked, part-time women excluded from some studies  Noise in figures – OSH in figures report – highlights exposures in food and textile manufacturing, education, health care and other service professions  Combined exposures to noise and ototoxic substances – literature review  Transport sector – OSH in figures report – highlights overlooked exposures to women in general, in particular women in service tasks (restauration, cleaning)  Factsheets on respiratory and skin sensitisers, highlight exposures to biological agents in service sectors, health care, etc.  Reports on cleaners – highlight exposures to precarious workers and lack of training and information  Report on HORECA and efacts on Dangerous substances in HORECA – highlights multiple exposures and lack of information  Legionella and legionnaires’ disease: European policies and good practices, Report and Factsheet 100
  • 27. http://osha.europa.eu 37 Women at work – younger women Employment trend  Unemployment gap betw. young men and women has clearly diminished, in some countries unemployment of young men has even become slightly higher.  Younger women work more in retail and HORECA  Younger women work more in low- qualified jobs and on temporary contracts  Gender pay gap already at the start of career  Employment gap particularly high for mothers aged 15 - 24 with very young and with children in school age OSH implications  Different risks and trends for different age groups – prevention should be tailored  Lack of experience and training of young women  Younger women exposed to sexual harassment  High exposure to violence, due to client contact  Occupational accidents even increasing in some countries in female-dominated sectors, such as HORECA  Less access to consulation, preventive services, representation at enterprise level  Young mothers a particularly vulnerable group
  • 28. http://osha.europa.eu 39 EU example - integrating gender in the work of labour inspection Austrian labour inspection Gender Mainstreaming Policy  Improved compliance – benefits women and men  Inspectors responsibility to set the right climate. How can they influence: the workplace level – broader prevention level  Integrated into national OSH strategy – gender budgeting  Austrian Inspectorate gender mainstreaming project • Mainstream gender into the working lives of inspectors- helps to raise awareness • Mainstream gender into daily work of inspectors • Guidelines for inspectors – always speak to both men and women – checklists, does my advice cover both women and men? will my advice benefit men and women? • Training for inspectors • Gender focus in guides for cleaners, investigation on female musicians, gender mainstreamed into actions for ageing workers The labour inspection staff act.. ..considering the different situation of women and men in a working enviroment and .. regarding to the fact, that OSH measures should be gender-sensitive Presentation available at https://osha.europa.eu/en/seminars/seminar-on-women-at-work-raising-the-profile-of-women-and-occupational-safety-and-health-osh
  • 30. http://osha.europa.eu 41 Gender mainstreaming Developing risk assessment tools  Mainstreaming, gender-sensitivity means: ensuring both women and men are included in all h&s activities and doing a ‘gender- check’  EU-OSHA factsheet 43 provides a basic approach: • Avoid assumptions of who is at risk • Include women’s jobs and consult them • Look at real work situations • Match jobs, equipment to real people • Include work-life balance • Incorporate into a holistic approach  Examples of practical tools and their application needsharing http://osha.europa.eu/en/publications/factsheets/43/view