Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Work Safety essays
Work Safety essays    The International Labor Office (ILO)  suggests  that  every  year  two     million lives are affected due to accidents and illnesses related  to  work.     Work-related injuries also cost the  world  economy  around  $1.25  trillion     which is equal to $1,250,000 million US dollars. (Safety  Culture  at  Work.     Safety in numbers - Pointers for a global safety culture at work, 2003).  In     USA every year there are several people who are  affected  as  a  result  of     work-related injuries. And among them  it  is  the  teenage  population  who     account for the highest numbers of work-related injuries. The teenagers  are     usually affected as a result of burns, falls and other accidents in most  of     the work-related injuries. Workplace chemicals can also affect  them.  There     have been growing concerns that  teenagers  who  are  exposed  to  chemicals     during work would generate reproductive disorders in their  later  life.  It     has been found  by  scientists  that  reproductive  organs  could  grow  and     develop rapidly in those  teenagers  who  are  exposed  to  the  dangers  of     chemicals  at  work.  (Protecting  Youth  at  Work:  Health,   Safety,   and     Development of Working Children and Adolescents in the United States, 1998)            And the immune systems of the teenagers would also be affected  as  a     result of the exposure to the hazards of  the  chemicals.  More  than  1,000     teens in 1997 were found affected as a result of the exposure  to  chemicals     by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. (Safety Culture at Work.  Safety  in     numbers - Pointers for a global safety culture at work, 2003). But a  report     of the National Research  Council  which  was  published  in  1998  entitled      Protecting Youth at Work' notes that the figures which were brought out  by     the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics regarding the  number  of  teens  to  be     affected as a result of the exposure to chemicals was actually  understate...     
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
 
