Department of Environment, Climate Change and Health, World Health Organization, Avenue Appia 20, 1211 Geneva 27, Switzerland.
Department of Healthier Populations, World Health Organization Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean, Amman, Jordan.
Bull World Health Organ. 2023 Jun 1;101(6):418-430Q. doi: 10.2471/BLT.23.289703. Epub 2023 May 1.
Through sustainable development goals 3 and 8 and other policies, countries have committed to protect and promote workers' health by reducing the work-related burden of disease. To monitor progress on these commitments, indicators that capture the work-related burden of disease should be available for monitoring workers' health and sustainable development. The World Health Organization and the International Labour Organization estimate that only 363 283 (19%) of 1 879 890 work-related deaths globally in 2016 were due to injuries, whereas 1 516 607 (81%) deaths were due to diseases. Most monitoring systems focusing on workers' health or sustainable development, such as the global indicator framework for the sustainable development goals, include an indicator on the burden of occupational injuries. Few such systems, however, have an indicator on the burden of work-related diseases. To address this gap, we present a new global indicator: mortality rate from diseases attributable to selected occupational risk factors, by disease, risk factor, sex and age group. We outline the policy rationale of the indicator, describe its data sources and methods of calculation, and report and analyse the official indicator for 183 countries. We also provide examples of the use of the indicator in national workers' health monitoring systems and highlight the indicator's strengths and limitations. We conclude that integrating the new indicator into monitoring systems will provide more comprehensive and accurate surveillance of workers' health, and allow harmonization across global, regional and national monitoring systems. Inequalities in workers' health can be analysed and the evidence base can be improved towards more effective policy and systems on workers' health.
通过可持续发展目标 3 和 8 以及其他政策,各国承诺通过减少与工作相关的疾病负担来保护和促进工人的健康。为了监测这些承诺的进展,应该有能够捕捉与工作相关的疾病负担的指标,以监测工人的健康和可持续发展。世界卫生组织和国际劳工组织估计,2016 年全球 1879890 例与工作相关的死亡中,仅有 363283 例(19%)是由于伤害造成的,而 1516607 例(81%)死亡是由于疾病造成的。大多数关注工人健康或可持续发展的监测系统,如可持续发展目标全球指标框架,都包括一个关于职业伤害负担的指标。然而,很少有此类系统有关于与工作相关的疾病负担的指标。为了解决这一差距,我们提出了一个新的全球指标:按疾病、风险因素、性别和年龄组划分的归因于选定职业风险因素的疾病死亡率。我们概述了该指标的政策理由,描述了其数据来源和计算方法,并报告和分析了 183 个国家的官方指标。我们还提供了该指标在国家工人健康监测系统中的使用示例,并强调了该指标的优势和局限性。我们的结论是,将新指标纳入监测系统将更全面、准确地监测工人的健康,并在全球、区域和国家监测系统中实现协调。可以分析工人健康方面的不平等现象,并改善循证基础,以制定更有效的工人健康政策和制度。