Resilient organizations have the capacity to anticipate, monitor, respond and learn, especially in the face of unexpected challenges. As an emerging concept, resilience in OSH management holds the potential to enhance an organization’s capacity to respond to unexpected and complex risk management situations, by improving the number of things that go right, rather than by reducing the number of things that go wrong. The Technical Session will discuss this potential paradigm shift including the potential application of engineering principles to enhance safety management systems.
Moderator:
Frank Muchiri, Switzerland
Speakers:
Ikenna Ebuenyi, Nigeria
Seong-Kyu Kang, Republic of Korea
Hélène Michel, France
Hector Upegui, Germany
Labour markets, business models and technology are changing at a fast pace. New forms of work using new technologies such as platforms, the increase of self-employed and often blurred employment status and the interconnection between companies at national and cross border level makes it difficult for regulators to effectively govern occupational safety and health, both in terms of responsiveness of legislation as well as the regulatory capacity of compliance mechanisms. The technical session will debate these challenges and introduce innovative practices on how are countries preparing for the future of work.
Moderator:
Joaquim Pintado Nunes, Switzerland
Speakers:
William Cockburn, Spain
Valerio de Stefano, Belgium
Angela Herrera, Colombia
Richard Judge, United Kingdom
Stephanie Klaus, United States of America
Doo Yong Park, Republic of Korea (TBC)
Alan Stevens, United Kingdom
Jukka Takala, Finland
The tri-partite model for the governance of OSH policy and regulatory development has been an effective approach to strengthening worker health protection in Canada, and many other countries. This technical session will review global innovations in tripartite governance in support of policy, regulation and standard development. The session will consider opportunities and challenges in the new world of work, and examine how the model has supported a culture of prevention. Panelists will discuss the work of the tri-partite technical committee that developed ILO Convention C190, and the session will include four case studies of tripartite governance experiences in Chile, New Zealand, Singapore and Canada.
Moderator:
Cameron Mustard, Canada
Speakers:
John Beckett, Canada
Marie Clarke Walker, Canada
Pedro Contador, Chile
Michael Dauncey, Canada
Sujoy Dey, Canada
Fiona Ewing, New Zealand
John Ng, Singapore
Rakesh Patry, Canada
Shelley Uvanile-Hesch, Canada
The COVID-19 pandemic has sharply disrupted employment in many countries around the globe. Many millions of workers have adjusted to working remotely from their homes. And many more millions of workers, in sectors designated as essential, have been working in proximity to co-workers and, in some cases, providing services to clients, customers and other members of the public. This technical session will consider 3 dimensions of efforts to protect workers from the risks of COVID-19. A panel of OSH regulators will discuss the novel challenges faced by labour inspection services in the supporting essential workplaces in the adoption of effective infection control practices. A panel of OSH prevention experts will describe the exceptional importance of the global internet to rapidly disseminate guidance from trusted source authorities to hundreds of thousands of workplaces. The session will conclude with a global panel of scientists reflecting on the challenges in precisely identifying workplace transmission of COVID-19.
Moderator:
Erin Oliver, Canada
Speakers:
Audrina Chua, Singapore
Andrew Curran, United Kingdom
Letitia Davis, United States of America
Siong Hin Ho, Singapore
Janet Mannella, Canada
David Michaels, United States of America
Peter Smith, Canada
Sven Timm, Germany
Jody Young, Canada
VISION ZERO was launched by the ISSA at the XXI World Congress on Safety and Health at Work in Singapore. VISION ZERO promotes a comprehensive prevention strategy for safety, health and wellbeing and calls for a future for all without accidents, diseases or harm at work.
The Technical Session looks at how VISION ZERO has developed as successful strategy to implement a prevention culture, focusing on responsible leadership and igniting a VISION ZERO movement all around the world.
It will discuss the ways and methods that were used to mobilize and inspire the commitment by business leaders, political decision-makers, social partners, authorities and occupational safety and health professionals to promote a safe and healthy working environment for all, supported by the application of Seven Golden Rules.
The Technical Session will explore opportunities for a proactive role of industry and all involved stakeholders to open perspectives of a strategic preventive culture to new fields. Therefore, possible links for the VISION ZERO approach to the public health sector in pandemic times, to global supply chains, to sustainable investments and to the society, as a whole will be discussed.
Moderator:
Jillian Lee Hamilton, Australia
Speakers:
Olga Bogdanova, Ukraine
Melanie Brinkmann, Germany
Helmut Ehnes, Switzerland
Thomas Englerth, United States of America
Siong Hin Ho, Singapore
Hans-Horst Konkolewsky, Spain
Karl-Heinz Noetel, Switzerland
Roy Slack, Canada
The digital transformation is a game changer for the way we work and live. Future scenarios of robots working side by side with human beings are no longer a utopia but already exist. New forms of work lead to a major increase in self-employment and non-regular employment. While automation so far mainly has affected the industrial sector, a digital world will impact all sectors and all types of work. This presents both a risk and an opportunity for the world of work as we know it and consequently for safety, health and wellbeing.
In this Technical Session, experts will showcase how technical achievements through digital transformation already help make work safer, monitor health, improve quality, productivity and thus overall business results. Also discussed will be how to assess new risks related to new technologies, automation and more complex systems. Prevention services and actors need to adapt to these developments. An additional critical issue to be discussed will be how they can contribute to find solutions for smaller companies with limited resources and reach out to non-standard types of employment.
The overall challenge in a digital world will be to preserve, respect and develop the human factor as important for success.
Moderator:
Marc Malenfer, France
Marc Wittlich, Germany
Speakers:
Pierre Berastegui, Belgium
Hans-Jürgen Bischoff, Germany
Scott Gaddis, Canada
Michel Hery, France
Agnès Parent-Thirion, Ireland
Stéphane Pimbert, France
Andrea Rowe, Australia
Maria-Luz Vega, Switzerland
Christian Werner, Germany
In the context of rapidly changing forms of work organization and work practices, this session will overview innovations in safety and health administration in institutions responsible for OSH compliance.
Moderator:
Joaquim Pintado Nunes, Switzerland
Speakers:
Duncan Shaw, Canada
Luis Carlos Lumbreras, Brazil
Kateryna Kuznetsova, Russian Federation
Zhao Li, United States of America
Kevin Myers, United Kingdom
Silas Sng, Singapore
Johan van Middelar, Netherlands
Selçuk Yasar, Turkey
This session will focus on the prevention of violence and harassment in the workplace, including international legislative developments, case studies, and tools for prevention and return to work.
Moderator:
Troy Winters, Canada
Speakers:
Audrey Gilbeau, Canada
Elisa Ilarda, Australia
Luz S. Marin, United States of America
Hannah Milward, New Zealand
This symposium will focus on the prevention of psychosocial risks at work, as well as the challenges of managing mental health in the workplace. Leading examples involving standards, regulations and workplace practices will be highlighted.
Moderator:
Liz Horvath, Canada
Speakers:
Charlotte Grevfors Ernoult, Luxembourg
Janet Nwaogu, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China
Michel Rodrigue, Canada
Joti Samra, Canada
Steve Tizzard, Canada
Sue Weston, Australia
When reliable OSH data is not available, policy-makers, employers, and workers lack crucial knowledge for the prevention of occupational injuries and diseases. This session will examine data gaps at the global, national and enterprise levels and will highlight new and innovative tools for collecting and using OSH data.
Moderator:
Yuka Ujita, Thailand
Speakers:
Thuthula Balfour, South Africa
Sean Banaee, United States of America
Rafael J. Consunji, Qatar
Jillian Lee Hamilton, Australia
Balint Nafradi, Switzerland
To what extent can training and education serve organizations on the road to Vision Zero? This symposium examines ways responsible organizations develop a positive, caring work culture and safe, healthy and productive workforces through training and education.
Moderator:
Louise Hosking, United Kingdom
Speakers:
Marilyn Hubner, Canada
Ugochi Obidiegwu, Nigeria
Davide Scotti, Italy
Bonnie Yau, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of China
Workers' compensation and employment injury insurance schemes play a pivotal role not only in providing necessary compensations and rehabilitation to injured workers but also in enhancing prevention of occupational injuries and diseases. This session will highlight their efforts in both developing and developed countries to cater for needs of all workers through integrated strategies on OSH, compensation and rehabilitation.
Moderator:
Gilles Binet, Canada
Speakers:
Mohammed Azman Aziz Mohammed, Malaysia
Ellen MacEachen, Canada
Raffaello Marcelloni, Italy
Anna Weigelt, Sweden
Every year the lives of approximately 1.25 million people are cut short as a result of a road traffic crash. Between 20 and 50 million more people suffer non-fatal injuries, with many incurring a disability as a result of their injury. This symposium will look to technological developments and to promising approaches to strengthening a culture of prevention for the way forward to Vision Zero.
Moderator:
Nadja Schilling, Germany
Speakers:
Mohammed Azman Aziz Mohammed, Malaysia
Sashikala Chandrasekar, India
Sujoy Dey, Canada
Carl Heinlein, United States of America
Peter Schwaighofer, Austria
This session will focus on examples of evidence-focused, population-based approaches aimed at changing attitudes and behaviours to build cultures of injury prevention at work, at home and in the community.
Moderator:
Ian Pike, Canada
Speakers:
Lilis Surienty Abd Talib, Malaysia
Azlan Darus, Malaysia
Laura Dale, Canada
Richard Rinehart, United States of America
This session will profile stories from Canada and around the world illustrating successful approaches to building strong workplace prevention cultures.
Moderator:
Adrian Cook, Canada
Speakers:
Naziadin Abd Ghani, Malaysia
Chris Atchison, Canada
Maia Foulis, Canada
Britta Schmitt-Howe, Germany
Ricardo Vyhmeister, Chile
Safety and Health is the responsibility of society as a whole. This session will showcase prevention culture initiatives and will discuss how these efforts can contribute to improve the culture around occupational safety and health in the future.
Moderator:
Siong Hin Ho, Singapore
Speakers:
Tommi Alanko, Finland
Ulrike Bollmann, Germany
Kyungwoo Kim, Republic of Korea
Pete Kines, Denmark
Hans-Horst Konkolewsky, Spain
Information technology can improve workplace recognition, control, and regulation of OSH hazards, risks and working conditions. This session will focus on leading digital OSH tools and evidence-based online prevention resources.
Moderator:
Louise Logan, Canada
Speakers:
Lucia Botti, Italy
Duane D'sa, Canada
Edwin Galea, United Kingdom
Jacqui McLaughlin, United Kingdom
Syed Wajid Ali Shah, Pakistan
Imelda Wong, United States of America
State-of-the-art information and communication campaigns can be powerful tools for raising OSH knowledge, awareness and action. This symposium will focus on effective campaigns, including Vision Zero and social and digital media interventions, and illustrate effective techniques and strategies.
Moderator:
Donna Van Bogaert, United States of America
Speakers:
Angela Janowitz, Germany
Kiran Kapoor, Canada
Betty Nyereyegona, Zimbabwe
Timothy Tregenza, Spain
Faiza Zia, Pakistan
The burden of occupational cancer continues to grow, despite the fact exposures responsible for occupational cancer are well known and solutions are available to control these exposures. This session will focus on innovative approaches to applying these solutions to achieve safe and healthy work for all.
Moderator:
Paul Demers, Canada
Speakers:
Eduardo Algranti, Brazil
Emilie Counil, France
Hugh Davies, Canada
Lesley Rushton, United Kingdom
Global supply chains cross national borders with varying standards for worker health protection. The symposium will highlight challenges and solutions for strengthening worker health protection across diverse market systems, regulatory regimes and safety cultures.
Moderator:
Emily Norgang, Canada
Speakers:
Silvana Cappuccio, Italy
Lisa Hollands, Germany
Rakesh Patry, Canada
Kalpona Aktar, Bangladesh
There are opportunities for greater progress in integrating people with disability in the world of work. This session will highlight successful approaches in different countries and economic sectors to support work participation among those with disabilities.
Moderator:
Sari Sairanen, Canada
Speakers:
Mohammed Azman Aziz Mohammed, Malaysia
Graham Halsey, Scotland
François Perl, Belgium
Wolfgang Zimmerman, Canada
The themes of this session include good practices, innovative solutions and effective management to advance safety culture in agriculture.
Moderator:
Magdalena Wachnicka-Witzke, Poland
Speakers:
Magalie Cayon, France
Sashikala Chandrasekar, India
Isaac Abril Muñoz, Spain
Arnd Spahn, Germany
Päivi Wallin, Finland
Aleksandra Hadzik, Poland
Anne Roudot, France
Procedures, processes, and risk assessments are only one way to improve OSH. Beyond the old safety framework approach, what is crucial is to create a culture which translates OSH into something tangible, related to daily life of workers. The session will draw on practical experiences to demonstrate the potential of strong workplace OSH culture to support OSH performance and business success.
Moderator:
Kris De Meester, Belgium
Speakers:
John Beckett, Canada
Wouter De Gier, Netherlands
Wolf Kirsten, United States of America
Karolien Van Nunen, Belgium
While the contribution of GSCs to global economic growth and job opportunities is evident, their impact on the living and working conditions and the safety and health of workers raises important concerns. This session will examine innovative means that have been developed to improve working conditions and OSH in global supply chains.
Moderator:
Joaquim Pintado Nunes, Switzerland
Speakers:
Ockert Dupper, Switzerland
Ruma Ghosh, India
Siena Harlin, United States of America
Anne-Marie la Rosa, Switzerland
Marcelo Tacitano, Brazil
Automated vehicles raise new questions about OSH risks and responsibilities for workers and employers. This symposium will examine emerging issues, in the near future when traffic is partly automated, and in the subsequent era of totally driverless traffic.
Moderator:
Walter Eichendorf, Germany
Kay Schulte, Germany
Speakers:
José Raúl Gonzales, Guatemala
Charles Johnson, United Kingdom
Karin Müller, Germany
Wolfgang Uslar, Germany
Jason Weibel, Canada
Employment in the renewable energy and recycling industries is growing rapidly in the developed and developing world. This symposium will overview OSH hazards in these sectors and highlight innovative control practices.
Moderator:
Tara Peel, Canada
Speakers:
Victoria Arrandale, Canada
Repon Chowdhury, Bangladesh
Patricia Dirrenberger, France
Oswald Losert, Germany
Jessica Ramsey, United States of America
OSH vulnerability – defined by exposure to hazards in contexts of inadequate workplace policies and practices – is more common among specific groups of workers: migrants, new and young workers and workers in the informal economy. This symposium will examine regulatory innovations to strengthen protection in the context of vulnerability.
Moderator:
Sari Sairanen, Canada
Speakers:
Sanjoy Chowdhury, India
Jinky Leilanie Lu, Philippines
Florence Moyo, Zimbabwe (TBC)
Cheryl Peters, Canada
Ela Rydz, Canada
Yogindra Samant, Norway
Building on the SafeYouth@Work Congress held in Singapore in 2017, the Youth Spotlight is a lively, interactive session designed to spur global action to improve occupational safety and health (OSH) for young workers. This session will bring together youth champions around the world, policy makers and experts to reflect on how to engage youth into prevention and to integrate their voice and vision in building back better. It will also explore young workers’ expectations from institutional partners to continue supporting them in promoting OSH.
The Youth Spotlight is also closely connected with other programme elements including the International Media Festival for Prevention, Braindates and keynote speeches where OSH for young workers will be highlighted, discussed and advanced.
Speakers:
Dr. Ulrike Bollmann, ENETOSH, Germany
Ms. Diana Katherine Cely Silva, Red Trabajo Decente, Jovenes, Colombia
Ms. Nur Chariroh, Youth Champion, Indonesia
Mrs. Stephanie Claus, Youth Champion, United States of America
Ms. Hajar Dee, Youth Champion, Singapore
Zuly Duran Salazar, Red Trabajo Decente, Jovenes, Colombia
Ms. Anna Fendley, United Steel Workers / AFL-CIO US, United States of America
Mr. Phillip Germain, Saskatchewan Workers‘ Compensation Board, Canada
Ms. Angela Maria Herrera, Youth Champion, Colombia
Ms. Sarah Jampen Almzan, Independent Journalist, Canada
Mr. Francis Mugume, Youth Champion, Rwanda
Ms. Olga Sofia Parrado Sanchez, Red Trabajo Decente, Jovenes, Colombia
Ms. Luisa Fernanda Riano, Red Trabajo Decente, Jovenes, Colombia
Ms. Mercy-Grace Seuya, Association of Tanzanina Employers, Tanzania
Ms. Ilona Sorri, Youth Champion, Finland
The Global Forum for Work Injury Insurance provides a platform for representatives of occupational accident insurance or workers’ compensation schemes to discuss a number of global challenges that occupational accident insurance systems are facing today, such as the impact of technological progress in the areas of prevention and rehabilitation. This platform will open the opportunity to exchange information, to present good practice approaches and to formulate joint positions.
In Europe, Asia and North America there are already regular meetings and conferences at the regional level that have begun to link with each other. Complementing the activities of ISSA Technical Commission on Insurance against Employment Accidents and Occupational Diseases and the Special Commission on Prevention, this integrated platform provides an added global value for occupational accident insurance systems.
The Global Forum will be accessible for regional accident insurances associations and fora, international bodies and ISSA member institutions.
Speakers:
Mr. Marcelo Abi-Ramia Caetano, International Social Security Association, Switzerland
Dr. Mohammed Azman Aziz Mohammed, Social Security Organisation (SOCSO), Malaysia
Mr. Felipe Bunster Echenique, Mutual de Seguridad, Chile
Mr. Ron Dressler, Utah Labor Commission Division of Industrial Accidents, United States of America
Dr. Edlyn Höller, German Social Accident Insurance (DGUV), Germany
Dr. Stefan Hussy, German Social Accident Insurance (DGUV), Germany
Dr. Irene Isaka, East and Central Africa Social Security Association, Tanzania
During COVID-19 many workers around the world have continued working to ensure the continuity of critical functions, including in health care and emergency response, public sector services, construction and manufacturing. This session takes a focused look at how, as a global prevention community, we can come together to learn the lessons of COVID-19 and take action to protect the health and safety of essential workers in the future.
Moderators:
Ms. Henrietta Van Hulle, PSHSA, Canada
Speakers:
Dr. David Michaels, George Washington U, United States of America
Dr. Klaus Schäfer, BGHW, Germany
Ms. Christine Devine, Michael Garron Hospital, Canada
Dr. Viviana Gómez Sánchez, Latin-American Association of Occupational Health, Costa Rica
Mr. James Scongack, Bruce Power, Canada
Dr. Peter Smith, Institute for Work & Health, Canada
Ms. Henrietta Van hulle, Public Services Health and Safety Association, Canada
Report from the ISSA
Speakers
Ms. Claudia Ambrosio, ISSA, Italy
Dr. Mohammed Azman Aziz Mohammed, Social Security Organization (SOCSO), Malaysia
Mr. Marcelo Abi-Ramia Caetano, ISSA, Switzerland
Mr. Bernd Treichel, ISSA, Switzerland
Prof. Brou Yves Yéboué-Kouamé, CNPS, Côte D'Ivoire
Ms. Magdalena Wachnicka-Witzke, Kasa Rolniczego Ubezpieczenia Społecznego, Poland
Mr. Mummahad Mujahid, Saeed Ahmed Awan Centre for Improvement of Working Conditions & Environment, Pakistan
Mr. Malik M. Jamil, Vision Technologies, Pakistan
Ms. Sundas Khalil, Vision Technologies, Pakistan
Report from the ILO
Moderator
Joaquim Pintado Nunes, ILO, Switzerland
Yuka Ujita, ILO, Thailand
Speakers
Ms. Manal Azzi, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Laetitia Dumas, ILO, Switzerland
Mr. Ockert Dupper, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Deborah France-Massin, ILO, Switzerland
Mr. Franklin Muchiri, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Martha Newton, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Vera Paquete-Perdigão, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Ana Catalina Ramirez, ILO, Switzerland
Ms. Maria Helena André, ILO, Switzerland