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The sick work is overlooking one inconvenient truth. Hazards 101, January-March 2008ĭame blast The government’s ‘work is good for you’ push to make It wasn’t, as Yorkshire factory worker Martin Muir can now testify. Hazards 103, July-September 2008įood flavour wrecks lungs When dozens of US popcorn workers had their lungs destroyed by a flavouringĬhemical, it caused a national scandal. Their product, exposes industry’s dangerous tactics. Spin cycle When research shows a chemical could be killing you, industry-backed scientists Hazards editor Rory O’Neill questions whether all this attention from employers is really for our own good. And when we fall short of perfection, they label us shirkers, sickos and slobs. They’ll weigh us, keep tabs on our bad habits and ask questions when we are sick. You big fat liars Oh, they say it’s because they care. As the recession bites, Hazards editor Rory O’Neill argues that workers could get less of the credit and feel more of the crunch. And a new workplace safety strategy promises improvements, but the funds to deliver aren’t there. Hazards 110, April-June 2010Ĭredit crunch Welfare reforms are demanding the sick and unemployed get into work, but the jobs don’t exist. Hazards examines the possibilities and pitfalls. But under a new 'fit note' system your doctor has different options, and can say you are either unfit or sorta-kinda-fit for work, as long as the employer takes certain action. Hazards 121, January-March 2013įit for purpose? For many employers there are two categories of employee - 'workers' and, for those who happen to be sick, 'shirkers'. But Hazards editor Rory O'Neill says the new union blueprint differs from that of lifestyle evangelists, advising that the best way to improve well-being is to make the whole job healthier. Well, then? Employers who create healthy workplaces can benefit from reduced employee absence and increased productivity, according to a TUC well-being guide. But the TUC’s Hugh Robertson says while they obsess about your diet and fitness, why is there fat chance they’ll show this level of concern about the damage wrought by your job? Hazards 132, October-December 2015 Hard to swallow Both the government and employers seem terribly interested in your ‘well-being’. Level thinking What should you do at work when an occupational hygienist calls? Hazards cautions that safety reps should make sure anyone used to assess workplace risks and exposure levels has the right skills, the right brief and the right oversight. But their ‘totally dehumanising’ behaviour would be exposed in court. She tells Hazards editor Rory O’Neill how college bosses denied repeatedly responsibility for her symptoms. Unravelling Art lecturer Kate Rawnsley knew a succession of maddening management decisions were pushing her to the verge of a breakdown.
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But work-related cancers caused by routine toxic exposures, both at incidents and in training, could be a far bigger risk to their health, warns Hazards editor Rory O’Neill. Smoking gun Firefighters risk their lives to save ours. In a perverse twist, millions of the workers at highest risk of Covid-19 because of their jobs have been left with access to little and sometimes no sick pay. Sickening It’s a simple choice – your money or your life.