ILO Report: Annually 22.8 million Work Suffer Occupational Injuries, 18,970 Die Due to Excessive Heat

22.8 million work suffer occupational injuriesAccording to the International Labour Organisation(ILO)’s report titled Ensuring safety and health at work in a changing climate, annually 22.85 million occupational injuries, 18,970 deaths and 2.09 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) are reported due to excessive heat.

Key findings:

i.The report stated that large numbers of workers in hot rural regions of Americas, Africa, the Middle East and India, are suffering from irreversible kidney failure.

  • Epidemics of chronic kidney disease of unknown aetiology (CKDu) are affecting large numbers of workers conducting heavy manual labour in hot temperatures.
  • In 2020, an estimated 26.2 million people were living with chronic kidney disease due to exposure to excessive heat at workplace.

ii.The report estimates that over 70% of all workers (~2.41 billion workers) are exposed to excessive heat.  The exposure to excessive heat has increased by 34.7% from 2000 to 2020.

Impact of climate change on workers health globally:

The report highlighted various health conditions in workers that have been linked to climate change such as: cancer, cardio-vascular disease, respiratory illness, kidney dysfunction, mental health conditions, among others.

i.Annually around 1.6 billion workers are exposed to solar Ultraviolet(UV) radiation, with more than 18,960 work-related deaths annually from non-melanoma skin cancer.

ii.Over 1.6 billion outdoor workers are continuously exposed to outdoor air pollution.

iii.Annually, more than 3 lakh worked die due to pesticide poisoning and around 15,170 workers die due to exposure to parasitic and vector-borne disease.

Key Points:

i.The report cautioned that climate change can induce negative impact on employment such as: job losses, damage to business assets, decreased labour productivity and forced migration.

ii.At present, around 1.2 billion jobs rely directly on the effective management and sustainability of a healthy environment, in particular jobs in farming, fishing and forestry

iii.The report suggested that nations need to frame and adopt climate-change- specific Occupational Safety and Health(OSH) policies and integrate them with public health campaign.

About International Labour Organisation (ILO):
Director-General- Gilbert Houngbo
Headquarter- Geneva, Switzerland
Member nations- 187
Established- 1919





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