Analysis of findings from ESENER 3 on cover and contribution of prevention services to supporting OSH in establishments in Europe

Source avec lien : EU-OSHA, 2023.

L’objectif de ce document est de contribuer au discours actuel sur le rôle des services de prévention dans le soutien de la conformité substantielle, de manière à contribuer à l’élaboration de la future politique de l’UE. Combiné à une exploration des sources précédemment identifiées de données qualitatives et quantitatives sur les services de prévention dans l’UE et ailleurs, tirées du rapport EU-OSHA récemment publié sur « l’assurance de la conformité »[3],[4] et à une recherche de la littérature supplémentaire publiée au cours des 12 derniers mois.

Introduction In this report (see enclosed document below)[1] we explore findings from the 3rd European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (which we refer to throughout this document as ESENER 2019 to distinguish it from previous surveys) undertaken by the EU-OSHA, on the role of prevention services in providing support for the delivery of arrangements for healthy and safe working conditions in enterprises in the Member States of the European Union (EU 27). Objectives The primary aim of this report was to interrogate this data in order to improve knowledge and contribute to current discourse concerning: current practice, in terms of forms and functions of prevention services; the efficiency of prevention services in terms of the quality and coverage of the existing models of delivery of their service provision in the EU; the quality of the services they provide; Its objectives therefore include: A systematic and structured analysis of ESENER 2019 data related to OSH preventive services / OSH specialists, which includes, where appropriate, comparison with those of ESENER 2014. However, these findings also provided the background and point of departure for a Discussion Paper[2]. That paper’s aim is to contribute to current discourse on the role of prevention services in supporting substantive compliance in ways that that will help to inform future EU policy. In combination with an exploration of previously identified sources of qualitative and quantitative data on prevention services in the EU and elsewhere, drawn from the recently published EU-OSHA report on ‘securing compliance’[3],[4] and a search of the additional literature published during the last 12 months, the Discussion Paper following this report explores: the role played by preventive services in the context of a changing world of work and its reorganisation and restructuring; their marketisation and its effects on provision (including the influence of market demands, structures and professional capacities) changes in the nature of OSH professions, their orientations and practice and how these impact on the provision and delivery of support for securing substantive compliance with OSH requirements in the EU.

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