| Literature DB >> 33007820 |
Sarah A Felknor1, Jessica M K Streit2, L Casey Chosewood1, Michelle McDaniel3, Paul A Schulte2, George L Delclos3.
Abstract
Rapid and profound changes anticipated in the future of work will have significant implications for the education and training of occupational safety and health (OSH) professionals and the workforce. As the nature of the workplace, work, and the workforce change, the OSH field must expand its focus to include existing and new hazards (some yet unknown), consider how to protect the health and well-being of a diverse workforce, and understand and mitigate the safety implications of new work arrangements. Preparing for these changes is critical to developing proactive systems that can protect workers, prevent injury and illness, and promote worker well-being. An in-person workshop held on February 3-4, 2020 at The University of Texas Health Science Center (UTHealth) School of Public Health in Houston, Texas, USA, examined some of the challenges and opportunities OSH education will face in both academic and industry settings. The onslaught of the COVID-19 global pandemic reached the United States one month after this workshop and greatly accelerated the pace of change. This article summarizes presentations from national experts and thought leaders across the spectrum of OSH and professionals in the fields of strategic foresight, systems thinking, and industry, and provides recommendations for the field.Entities:
Keywords: Total Worker Health®; expanding occupational safety and health paradigm; future of work; occupational safety and health professional; training and education
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33007820 PMCID: PMC7579022 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17197154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Key changes in education and learning *.
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| Key Changes | Important and Provocative Implications for OSH |
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Recruit from diverse backgrounds (experiences and demographics) Evolve and adapt systems and approaches to align with learners’ diverse needs and preferences Empower learners to take active responsibility for their own (virtual) learning Teach students to deal with uncertainty and offer services to help them keep pace with rapid changes Establish new systems that recognize on-the-job training and assess competencies and skills required for work placement |
Core requirements should meet today’s needs and fill today’s gaps, but they must also undergo continuous review for relevance OSH educators will become irrelevant if they refuse to change and meet learners’ needs and programs lacking successful outcomes (e.g., job placement) may disappear Non-traditional credentials require valid, effective assessment, accreditation, and marketing to be accepted and respected by science and industry |
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| Key Changes | Important and Provocative Implications for OSH |
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Expand dual degree offerings and provide menu-driven curricula to facilitate OSH specialization Actively combat the loss of social interaction and teamwork that can come with nontraditional (e.g., online) learning |
Early and frequent exposure to OSH through problem-based learning and cooperative experiences may help establish OSH as an accepted norm Working with and in communities increases the applicability and transferability of training Integrating virtual and augmented reality into online learning experiences will create new experiences for teachers and learners |
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| Key Changes | Important and Provocative Implications for OSH |
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Include digitalization, societal reliance on technology, and the human-technology interface as key OSH training topics Teach from a biopsychosocial (rather than biomedical) model for OSH Bring in multiple disciplines to create a transdisciplinary workforce Provide instruction in organizational change and change management, and create opportunities to develop “soft skills” (e.g., social skills, communication skills, emotional intelligence) Foster skills in a variety of data collection, management, analysis, and interpretation techniques |
Expanding OSH paradigms by integrating aspects of Total Worker Health® (e.g., personal and societal risk factors, worker well-being) will create systems thinkers Knowledge and skills that are not traditionally a part of OSH will require new evaluation metrics Trainers must have the right credentials and skills sets to teach new OSH topics |
* Key Changes and Implications reflect an integrated summary of input provided by workshop breakout groups.
Systems approach to occupational safety and health (OSH) pressing issues *.
| Challenge | Proposed Changes | Unintended Adverse Consequences |
|---|---|---|
| Technological disruption |
Build a shared understanding of tech disruption, antecedents and consequences of new tech adoption Adopt practices and policies that support and empower workers (e.g., bottom-up decision making, flexible work, continuing education and skills building, job security, organized labor, regulations for workload or work time) |
Increased divide of high and low skilled jobs; reinforced and accelerated social divide; under/unemployment Blurred work-life boundaries; reduced work hours and benefits; increased workload Changes in competition (e.g., businesses closures); loss of profits, knowledge, and jobs |
| Global competition |
Support organized labor and provide protections for whistleblowers and intellectual property Develop systems that both recognize success and support those who struggle Advocate for global standards for care, worker benefits, and OSH regulations Foster personal and professional growth and well-being for workers |
Decline in unions and decline in trades; loss of union and workplace rights Culture destruction; loss of cultural identity; cross-cultural miscommunication and misinformation Increasing disparities at the organizational, corporate, and social-ecological levels |
| Changing worker demographics |
Provide sufficient compensation and benefits (e.g., family care options, paid time off (vacation and sick), reasonable accommodations) Diversify the workforce through inclusive hiring practices Allocate funding to represent taxpayer needs and interests Balance profits with corporate social responsibility programs, philanthropy, and volunteer efforts; and foster initiative-driven community-based partnerships Train workers on OSH to meet a given workforce’s needs Build mentorship capacity and provide access to goal-directed reskilling and upskilling opportunities Provide transparent evaluations and continuous feedback at the worker and organization levels Offer work flexibilities that enhance quality of life for workers and their families |
Wasted resources due to ‘fixes’ that fail to meet workers’ needs Over- or underuse of benefits Perceived favoritism of certain groups; nonverbal/implicit bias during hiring; increased discrimination Disengagement; loss of confidence in management; waning loyalty to employer miscommunications due to inadequate or excess communication; language barriers Vacated positions due to reskilling and upskilling Litigation; increased benefits packages Blurred work-life boundaries |
* Issues, Changes, and Consequences reflect an integrated summary of the input provided by workshop breakout groups.
Profile of the OSH professional of the future *.
| Attribute | Strategies to Foster Attribute Development |
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| Systems thinking |
Develop capacity to recognize work-related health problems and issues, especially for vulnerable groups (e.g., emergency responders, construction workers) Focus on holistic approaches to problem solving Create opportunities to partner with and learn from other disciplines, such as public health, industrial hygiene, environmental health, geography, social services and mental health, and risk management (e.g., insurance experts and business strategists) Increase attention on health and safety for recovery and rebuilding, including employers, OSH, public health, education, and special populations (e.g., immigrant workers and their communities, employees affected by public health emergencies) |
| Emotional intelligence |
Include leadership, marketing, and communication skills in OSH training programs Expand OSH response capacity through cross-training, especially for mid-career professionals |
| Collaboration |
Identify a broad set of OSH collaborators, such as policymakers; professional societies and groups (e.g., ACOEM, ACGIH, ASA); employers (including small, medium, and large enterprises); city, county, and state governments; public health professionals; medicine and nursing professionals; environmental health and safety professionals; social scientists; and wellness/health promotion groups Provide strategies to identify key conceptual overlaps with stakeholders and approaches for capitalizing on shared interests |
| OSH champion |
Embed OSH professionals into industry in order to bring recognition to the relevance and importance of OSH, build leadership support, raise employee awareness, and purposefully prioritize organizational problems Encourage interaction between OSH and non-OSH professionals to engage wider group of professionals to advocate for and support frontline OSH activities. Lead by example, leveraging major public health events (e.g., floods, pandemics) to highlight community-wide relevance of OSH. |
* Attributes and strategies reflect an integrated summary of the input provided by workshop breakout groups.
Figure 1An expanded focus for occupational safety and health. * Horizontal and vertical expansion build on the work of WHO [20], Eurofound [21], and TWH [22,23].