Occupational Health Management Archives – May 1, 2007
May 1, 2007
View Archives Issues
-
Downsizing and layoffs affect health, safety of those who stay
Tamara Blow knows firsthand the stressful effects downsizing can have on workers who escape the layoffs and keep their jobs. -
Light duty gaining acceptance for workers
When an employee at your facility reports back after an injury or illness with a physician's order for "light duty" in hand, is the prescription a guide to what the employee can do, ...? -
Final rule near on PPE provided by employer
A Department of Labor rule that would require employers to pay for certain personal protection equipment (PPE) will become a final Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) rule by November. -
NIOSH advocates designing prevention into processes
Bringing occupational safety and health into the initial design of workplaces, equipment, and processes is the goal of a proposed national strategy to create "Prevention through Design" (PtD). -
Too much overtime risky, prior health woes are worse
Working extended overtime hours for a long period of time has been shown to increase health and safety risks, but an occupational medicine study indicates that factors such as previous health problems carry a much greater risk to workers' health. -
Largest U.S. insurer's bonuses depend on health
The largest health insurer in the United States is saying its employees' bonuses are going to partially depend on the health of employees at companies it covers, but the reward to insured members will be measured in wellness, a company spokesman says. -
Drug-resistant TB poses new threat to HCWs
An extensively drug-resistant strain of tuberculosis (XDR-TB) is virtually untreatable and poses a threat to worldwide TB control. -
News Brief: OSHA reports high injury/illness rates
More than 14,000 employers have been notified that their worksite injury and illness rates are higher than average.