Importance of healthy older construction workers

Authors

  • Theo Haupt Peninsula Technikon, South Africa
  • Claire Deacon Occumed, Sout Africa
  • John Smallwood Nelson Mandela University, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.38140/as.v12i1.1746

Keywords:

medical surveillance, construction industry, older workers, health

Abstract

Older construction workers constitute a major proportion of total South African construction employment. Demographic changes and an apparent growing loss of interest among young people in careers in the construction industry are contributing to an increase in the proportion of older workers in the industry. There is a resultant decline in the growth of new cohorts entering the labour market. Consequently the size of the older cohort relative to the size of the younger cohort increases. Additionally, general and chronic occupational and non occupational diseases potentially reduce the overall labour force, shift the age structure due to mortality, change the skill composition of the labour supply, and increase labour turnover. This article reports on a study that sought to establish the health status of the older worker cohort in construction. The study found that older workers had problems with several occupational and non occupational diseases and presented with a range of musculoskeletal disorders, respiratory problems and skin infections. These diseases negatively affected work productivity in the industry and increased absenteeism. Further, the majority of workers required referral, many for unresolved non occupational such as various skin, musculoskeletal, as well as upper and lower respiratory disorders. Recommended interventions include regular medical surveillance as part of employer driven health promotion programs.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

##submission.downloads##

Published

2005-06-30

How to Cite

Haupt, T., Deacon, C. and Smallwood, J. (2005) “Importance of healthy older construction workers”, Acta Structilia, 12(1), pp. 1–19. doi: 10.38140/as.v12i1.1746.

Issue

Section

Review articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)

<< < 1 2 3 4 > >>