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. 2020 Sep 30;17(19):7154. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17197154

Table 2.

Systems approach to occupational safety and health (OSH) pressing issues *.

Challenge Proposed Changes Unintended Adverse Consequences
Technological disruption
Innovations that have significantly altered the way consumers, industries, or businesses operate
  • 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
Competing organizations serving international customers
  • 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
Shifts in historic worker characteristics
  • 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.