Rapports
Si nous voulons lutter plus efficacement contre les problèmes de santé et de sécurité en Europe, nous devons fournir aux décideurs politiques et aux professionnels de la santé et de la sécurité des informations actualisées de haute qualité. Nos rapports présentent les résultats des travaux de recherche. Ceux-ci offriront des bases de discussion à l'UE, aux autorités nationales, aux syndicats et aux experts pour réfléchir à la manière de remédier aux problèmes de santé et de sécurité.
-
published 17/04/2012
- Par ses 36 000 entretiens, l'ESENER a recueilli une quantité énorme de données comparables sur la manière dont la santé et la sécurité sont gérées sur les lieux de travail européens. Outre les principales conclusions qui ont été publiées en 2010, cette ressource permet de réaliser des analyses statistiques approfondies et d'identifier des problèmes sous-jacents. A cet effet, quatre projets d'analyse secondaire qui exploitent de manière plus complète les données de l'ESENER ont été mis en oeuvre. Leurs résultats sont présentés dans ce résumé. Les quatre rapports sont axés sur: La gestion de la santé et de la sécurité au travail; La représentation et la consultation des travailleurs concernant la santé et la sécurité; Les facteurs liés à la gestion efficace des risques psychosociaux; La gestion des risques psychosociaux — Moteurs, obstacles, besoins et mesures prises
-
published 17/04/2012
- In 2009, EU-OSHA carried out the first Europe-wide establishment survey on health and safety at the workplace, the European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (ESENER). Following on from the initial analysis presented in the descriptive overview report in 2010, four secondary analysis projects have been carried out in 2011. This report focuses on workers' participation in health and safety management. It highlights how participation varies across Europe and examines the relationship between worker representation and effective management of workplace risks.
-
published 17/04/2012
- In 2009, EU-OSHA carried out the first Europe-wide establishment survey on health and safety at the workplace, the European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (ESENER). Following on from the initial analysis presented in the descriptive overview report in 2010, four secondary analysis projects have been carried out in 2011. This report focuses on management of safety and health at work, examining how practices vary across Europe depending on, for example, establishment size, location and sector.
-
published 17/04/2012
- Employees often have a detailed knowledge of their work and how it can be made safer. This guide shows how workers can use this knowledge to actively liaise with managers to improve workplace safety and health. It outlines the respective roles, responsibilities and legal duties of workers, their representatives and employers. It gives concrete examples of steps that all parties can take to meaningfully improve occupational safety and health. This guide also contains a useful ‘checklist’ that workers and their representatives can work through to ensure that they are doing their utmost to reduce risks.
-
published 17/04/2012
- Safe and healthy workplaces help businesses and organisations to succeed and prosper and also benefit wider society. This guide gives business leaders practical information on how safety and health can be improved through effective leadership, worker involvement and ongoing assessment and review, making businesses and organisations safe and healthy for everyone. A diagnostic check gives an idea of the level of prevention in a company and provides ideas for improvement.
-
published 17/04/2012
-
published 17/04/2012
-
published 21/12/2011
- One conclusion from the EU-OSHA economic incentives project is that incentives schemes should not only reward past results of good OSH management (such as accident numbers in experience rating), but should also reward specific prevention efforts that aim to reduce future accidents and ill-health. Experts from the economic incentives project therefore suggested the development of compilations of innovative and evidence-based preventive solutions, starting with the three sectors construction, health care and HORECA (hotels, restaurants, catering). The preventive measures from these compilations are worth promoting in their own right, as well as being applied in economic incentives schemes. These preventive solutions can be used as a basis for incentive-providing organisations to develop their own incentive scheme, adapted to the specific situation in their sector and country.
-
published 29/11/2011
- Occupational safety and health culture, or more briefly 'OSH culture', can be seen as a concept for exploring how informal organisational aspects influence OSH in a positive or negative way. The aim is to convey up-to-date information on this complex topic in a straightforward, condensed way, trying to build a bridge between research and practice. The main approaches and methods that exist to assess the safety culture in an organisation are presented and discussed. This review gives an overview and selection of useful tools and techniques from the EU domain and abroad.
-
published 07/10/2011
- Mental health promotion (MHP) includes all the actions that contribute to good mental health. Its primary aim is to focus on what maintains and improves our mental wellbeing. It is important to highlight that optimally effective MHP should include a combination of both risk management and health promotion. In this good practice report you can find information on how to integrate MHP into a comprehensive approach to enhancing and promoting the health, safety and wellbeing of employees at work. Several of the case studies are particularly interesting because of their innovative and creative approaches.

