New Frontier of Occupational Safety and Health

New Frontier of Occupational Safety and Health

Over the past five decades, the Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) industry has made great strides in improvement, in line with a more robust regulatory and legal framework that drives organizations to establish safer practices. However, evolving risks continue to challenge what makes established global OHS standards most effective.

Marking these developments year over year is the UN World Day for Safety and Health at Work (28th April) – a day that promotes the criticality of an OHS program and underlines the shared responsibility that governments, employees, and workers have towards preventing occupational incidents and spread of diseases. And, delivering on the responsibility ties back to how well governments and organizations can keep up with the changing OHS landscape while driving improvements in standards and processes.

Such constant improvement is critical, as large numbers of injuries and deaths still exist. According to the estimates of the International Labour Organization (ILO) close to 2.3 million men and women around the world become victims of work-related diseases and accidents every year, which corresponds to a whopping 6000 deaths every day.


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