Self-Reported Work-Related Illness In 2004-05, Results From The Labour Force Survey

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Self-Reported Work-Related Illness In 2004-05, Results From The Labour Force Survey
Stationary Office | Pages:225 | 2006 | ISIN: Nil | 3 MB


Self-Reported Work-Related Illness In 2004-05, Results From The Labour Force Survey

By J R Jones MSc, C S Huxtable BSc and J T Hodgson MSc

* Publisher: UK Health & Safety Executive Statistics
* Number Of Pages: 225
* Publication Date: 2006
* Binding: PDF

work-related illness, working days lost, musculoskeletal disorders, stress, Labour Force Survey, SWI

ABSTRACT The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) commissioned a module of questions in the winter 2004/05 Labour Force Survey (LFS), to gain a view of work-related illness based on individuals’ perceptions. The LFS is a household survey, and is intended to be representative of the UK population. This is the sixth survey of self-reported work-related illness undertaken in conjunction with the UK LFS. The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) commissioned a survey in 1990 covering England and Wales, and one in 1995 covering Great Britain. The European Union Statistical Office (EUROSTAT) commissioned the third in 1998/99. This included most member states, but the UK coverage was restricted to people working in the past 12 months rather than people ever employed (as in the previous two surveys). The HSE commissioned further surveys in 2001/02 and 2003/04 covering people ever employed in Great Britain. The surveys are known as SWI90, SWI95, SWI98/99, SWI01/02 and SWI03/04 (surveys of Self-reported Work-related Illness). Results were published in 1993, 1998, 2001, 2003 and 2005. Headline results from the new survey (SWI04/05) which covers people ever employed in Great Britain, were published in Health and Safety Statistics 2004/05, providing estimates of the overall prevalence (including long standing as well as new cases) of self-reported work-related illness in the last 12 months, of incidence (new cases) in the same period and of annual working days lost due to work-related illness. This report focuses on releasing more detailed results by a range of demographic and employment-related variables. Some broad comparisons of the latest results with those from 2001/02 and 2003/04 (which are directly comparable) are also presented.


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