Kelly Rose
Editor
Kelly Rose
Editor
Musculoskeletal disorders, or MSDs, are one of the most widely-reported work-related health conditions. Lawrence Webb looks at how raising awareness is key to managing the issue.
ACCORDING TO the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), about 40,000 people in the construction industry suffer an MSD every year. The Royal College of General Practitioners has estimated that by 2025, there will be 9.1 million people living with one or more serious long-term conditions in the UK and the World Health Organization reports that MSDs are a leading contributor to disability worldwide.
Whether its back and neck pain, tendinitis, hand-arm vibration syndrome or carpal tunnel syndrome, MSDs can cause years of agonising aches and pains. They have a huge impact on the lives of many people around the world, impairing their ability to work and their overall quality of life.
This doesn’t have to be the case. Employers have a legal duty to protect their workers, and this includes putting measures in place to prevent MSDs and occupational safety and health professionals have a key role to play.
It is with this in mind that the HSE recently launched its ‘Work Right Construction’ campaign to tackle MSDs in this industry. The Executive is carrying out 1,000 inspections throughout October and November to check how workers are moving heavy and bulky materials as a target area for common activity that can lead to MSDs.
The Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH) is delighted to support the HSE’s campaign. Working together is vital to raise awareness of MSDs, particularly how to eliminate or manage them where necessary in support of construction worker health.
There are simple steps that organisations can take to achieve this, steps that don’t cost the earth but are incredibly effective.
Simply assessing moving and handling tasks to identify the risks, and then either eliminating the hazard at source or implementing controls that reduce the risk, will have a lasting benefit on the lives of construction workers, organisations and communities.
IOSH’s occupational health toolkit is full of free information on preventing MSDs.
Other key things for businesses to consider are:
And for workers themselves, there are also some key things to consider, such as:
Well-designed work, in which physical and psychosocial risks are properly managed, can both prevent the development of MSDs and support employees with non-work-related MSDs at work.
By following some of these steps, there are some huge advantages, for both businesses and workers.
Together, we can start to reduce the toll of MSDs. It’s time to Work Right.
Lawrence Webb is president-elect at the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health. For more information, visit www.iosh.com
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