Abstract

Operations in general industry, including manufacturing, expose employees to a myriad of occupational health hazards. To prevent exposure, occupational health and safety regulations were enacted, with both employers and workers instituting various risk reduction measures. The analysis of available occupational disease and injury statistics (indicators of worker physical health) can be used to infer the effectiveness of risk reduction measures and regulations in preventing exposure. Thus, using the READ approach, analyses of occupational disease and injury statistics from South African industry, derived from annual reports of the Compensation Fund, were conducted. The publicly available database of occupational disease and injury statistics from the South African general industry is unstructured, and the data are inconsistently reported. This data scarcity, symptomatic of an absence of a functional occupational disease surveillance system, complicates judgement making regarding the effectiveness of implemented risk reduction measures, enacted occupational health and safety regulations and the status of worker physical health from exposure to workplace hazards. The statistics, where available, indicate that workers continue to be exposed to occupational health impacts within general industry, notwithstanding risk reduction measures and enacted regulations. In particular, worker physical health continues to be impacted by occupational injuries and noise-induced hearing loss. This is suggestive of shortcomings and inefficiencies in industry-implemented preventive measures and the regulatory state. A robust national occupational disease surveillance system is a regulatory tool that should detect and direct policy responses to identified occupational health hazards.

Highlights

  • Economic sectors such as the manufacturing and utilities sectors are cardinal in that their products are used for daily human sustenance as well as for supporting national economies [1,2]

  • Compensated injuries and occupational diseases (ODs) are regulated through the Compensation of Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act within South African general industry [25]

  • This study evaluated the status of worker physical health in South African general industry through the analysis of OD and injury statistics reported by the Compensation

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Summary

Introduction

Economic sectors such as the manufacturing and utilities sectors are cardinal in that their products are used for daily human sustenance as well as for supporting national economies [1,2]. Besides the noted societal benefits, workers in these sectors are exposed to inherent occupational health hazards [5]. The expansion of these sectors requires the assessment and management of health risks from exposure [3]. Advancements in mechanisation have resulted in unsafe work conditions [6,8], which create occupational health hazards, directly affecting

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