R171 Occupational Health Services Recommendation, 1985
R171 Occupational Health Services Recommendation, 1985
R171 Occupational Health Services Recommendation, 1985
Services Recommendation,
1985
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Preamble
Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office, and having met in its
Seventy-first Session on 7 June 1985, and
Noting that the protection of the worker against sickness, disease and injury arising out of his employment is one
of the tasks assigned to the International Labour Organisation under its Constitution,
Noting the relevant international labour Conventions and Recommendations, and in particular the Protection of
Workers' Health Recommendation, 1953, the Occupational Health Services Recommendation, 1959, the Workers'
Representatives Convention, 1971, and the Occupational Safety and Health Convention and Recommendation,
1981, which establish the principles of national policy and action at the national level, and the Tripartite
Declaration of Principles concerning Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy adopted by the Governing Body
of the International Labour Office,
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to occupational health services, which is the
fourth item on the agenda of the session, and
Having determined that proposals shall take the form of a Recommendation supplementing the Occupational
Health Services Convention, 1985:
adopts this twenty-sixth day of June of the year one thousand nine hundred and eighty-five, the following
Recommendation, which may be cited as the Occupational Health Services Recommendation, 1985:
1. Each Member should, in the light of national conditions and practice and in consultation with the
most representative organisations of employers and workers, where they exist, formulate, implement
and periodically review a coherent national policy on occupational health services, which should include
2.
(1) Each Member should develop progressively occupational health services for all
workers, including those in the public sector and the members of production co-
operatives, in all branches of economic activity and all undertakings. The provision made
should be adequate and appropriate to the specific health risks of the undertakings.
(2) Provision should also be made for such measures as may be necessary and reasonably
provided for in the Occupational Health Services Convention, 1985, and in this
Recommendation.
II. Functions
undertakings they serve, taking into account in particular the occupational hazards in the working
environment as well as the problems specific to the branches of economic activity concerned.
5.
organisation of work which may give rise to risks for the health of
workers;
exposure.
(2) Such surveillance should be carried out in liaison with the other technical services of
the undertaking and in co-operation with the workers concerned and their
representatives in the undertaking or the safety and health committee, where they exist.
6.
(1) In accordance with national law and practice, data resulting from the surveillance of
to the employer, the workers and their representatives in the undertaking concerned or
(2) These data should be used on a confidential basis and solely to provide guidance and
advice on measures to improve the working environment and the health and safety of
workers.
(3) The competent authority should have access to these data. They may only be
communicated by the occupational health service to others with the agreement of the
employer and the workers or their representatives in the undertaking or the safety and
7. The surveillance of the working environment should entail such visits by the personnel providing
occupational health services as may be necessary to examine the factors in the working environment
which may affect the workers' health, the environmental health conditions at the workplace and the
working conditions.
(a) carry out monitoring of workers' exposure to special health hazards, when necessary;
(b) supervise sanitary installations and other facilities for the workers, such as drinking
(c) advise on the possible impact on the workers' health of the use of technologies;
(d) participate in and advise on the selection of the equipment necessary for the personal
(e) collaborate in job analysis and in the study of organisation and methods of work with
(f) participate in the analysis of occupational accidents and occupational diseases and in
9. Personnel providing occupational health services should, after informing the employer, workers and
(a) have free access to all workplaces and to the installations the undertaking provides for
the workers;
products, materials and substances used or whose use is envisaged, subject to their
preserving the confidentiality of any secret information they may learn which does not
(c) be able to take for the purpose of analysis samples of products, materials and
10. Occupational health services should be consulted concerning proposed modifications in the work
processes or in the conditions of work liable to have an effect on the health or safety of workers.
B. SURVEILLANCE OF THE WORKERS' HEALTH
11.
(1) Surveillance of the workers' health should include, in the cases and under the
conditions specified by the competent authority, all assessments necessary to protect the
for health reasons for the purpose of determining its possible occupational
determining the worker's suitability for the job and needs for
impairment.
(2) Provisions should be adopted to protect the privacy of the workers and to ensure that
health surveillance is not used for discriminatory purposes or in any other manner
12.
(1) In the case of exposure of workers to specific occupational hazards, in addition to the
surveillance of the workers' health should include, where appropriate, any examinations
and investigations which may be necessary to detect exposure levels and early biological
(2) When a valid and generally accepted method of biological monitoring of the workers'
health for the early detection of the effects on health of exposure to specific occupational
hazards exists, it may be used to identify workers who need a detailed medical
absences from work for health reasons, in order to be able to identify whether there is any relation
between the reasons for ill health or absence and any health hazards which may be present at the
workplace. Personnel providing occupational health services should not be required by the employer to
14.
(1) Occupational health services should record data on workers' health in personal
confidential health files. These files should also contain information on jobs held by the
workers, on exposure to occupational hazards involved in their work, and on the results
(2) The personnel providing occupational health services should have access to personal
health files only to the extent that the information contained in the files is relevant to the
performance of their duties. Where the files contain personal information covered by
(3) Personal data relating to health assessments may be communicated to others only
15. The conditions under which, and time during which, personal health files should be kept, the
conditions under which they may be communicated or transferred and the measures necessary to keep
them confidential, in particular when the information they contain is placed on computer, should be
prescribed by national laws or regulations or by the competent authority or, in accordance with national
16.
fitness for work involving exposure to a particular hazard, the physician who has carried
out the examination should communicate his conclusions in writing to both the worker
(2) These conclusions should contain no information of a medical nature; they might, as
appropriate, indicate fitness for the proposed assignment or specify the kinds of jobs and
permanently.
17. Where the continued employment of a worker in a particular job is contra-indicated for health
reasons, the occupational health service should collaborate in efforts to find alternative employment for
18. Where an occupational disease has been detected through the surveillance of the worker's health, it
should be notified to the competent authority in accordance with national law and practice. The
employer, workers and workers' representatives should be informed that this notification has been
carried out.
19. Occupational health services should participate in designing and implementing programmes of
information, education and training on health and hygiene in relation to work for the personnel of the
undertaking.
20. Occupational health services should participate in the training and regular retraining of first-aid
personnel and in the progressive and continuing training of all workers in the undertaking who
21. With a view to promoting the adaptation of work to the workers and improving the working
conditions and environment, occupational health services should act as advisers on occupational health
and hygiene and ergonomics to the employer, the workers and their representatives in the undertaking
and the safety and health committee, where they exist, and should collaborate with bodies already
22.
(1) Each worker should be informed in an adequate and appropriate manner of the health
hazards involved in his work, of the results of the health examinations he has undergone
(2) Each worker should have the right to have corrected any data which are erroneous or
(3) In addition, occupational health services should provide workers with personal advice
provide first-aid and emergency treatment in cases of accident or indisposition of workers at the
24. Taking into account the organisation of preventive medicine at the national level, occupational
(a) carry out immunisations in respect of biological hazards in the working environment;
(c) collaborate with the health authorities within the framework of public health
programmes.
25. Taking into account national law and practice and after consultation with the most representative
organisations of employers and workers, where they exist, the competent authority should, where
necessary, authorise occupational health services, in agreement with all concerned, including the worker
and his own doctor or a primary health care service, where applicable, to undertake or to participate in
(a) treatment of workers who have not stopped work or who have resumed work after an
absence;
26. Taking into account national law and practice concerning the organisation of health care, and
distance from clinics, occupational health services might engage in other health activities, including
curative medical care for workers and their families, as authorized by the competent authority in
consultation with the most representative organisations of employers and workers, where they exist.
27. Occupational health services should co-operate with the other services concerned in the
E. OTHER FUNCTIONS
28. Occupational health services should analyse the results of the surveillance of the workers' health and
of the working environment, as well as the results of biological monitoring and of personal monitoring of
workers' exposure to occupational hazards, where they exist, with a view to assessing possible
connections between exposure to occupational hazards and health impairment and to proposing
29. Occupational health services should draw up plans and reports at appropriate intervals concerning
their activities and health conditions in the undertaking. These plans and reports should be made
available to the employer and the workers' representatives in the undertaking or the safety and health
30.
(1) Occupational health services, in consultation with the employers' and the workers'
economic activity, for example, with a view to collecting data for epidemiological
(2) The results of the measurements carried out in the working environment and of the
assessments of the workers' health may be used for research purposes, subject to the
31. Occupational health services should participate with other services in the undertaking, as
appropriate, in measures to prevent its activities from having an adverse effect on the general
environment.
III. Organisation
32. Occupational health services should, as far as possible, be located within or near the place of
employment, or should be organised in such a way as to ensure that their functions are carried out at the
place of employment.
33.
(1) The employer, the workers and their representatives, where they exist, should co-
operate and participate in the implementation of the organisational and other measures
(2) In conformity with national conditions and practice, employers and workers or their
representatives in the undertaking or the safety and health committee, where they exist,
should participate in decisions affecting the organisation and operation of these services,
including those relating to the employment of personnel and the planning of the service's
programmes.
34.
(2) In accordance with national conditions and practice, occupational health services may
be organised by -
(3) The competent authority should determine the circumstances in which, in the
35. In situations where the competent authority, after consulting the representative organisations of
employers and workers concerned, where they exist, has determined that the establishment of an
interim measure, make arrangements, after consulting the workers' representatives in the undertaking
or the safety and health committee, where they exist, with a local medical service for carrying out the
environmental health conditions in the undertaking and ensuring that first-aid and emergency
IV Conditions of Operation
36.
(1) In accordance with national law and practice, occupational health services should be
hygiene, ergonomics, occupational health nursing and other relevant fields. They should,
as far as possible, keep themselves up to date with progress in the scientific and technical
knowledge necessary to perform their duties and should be given the opportunity to do so
(3) The occupational health services should, in addition, have the necessary
37.
services should be safeguarded. In accordance with national law and practice, this might
employer, the workers, and their representatives and the safety and health committees,
(2) The competent authority should, where appropriate and in accordance with national
law and practice, specify the conditions for the engagement and termination of
38. Each person who works in an occupational health service should be required to observe professional
secrecy as regards both medical and technical information which may come to his knowledge in
connection with his functions and the activities of the service, subject to such exceptions as may be
39.
(1) The competent authority may prescribe standards for the premises and equipment
(2) Occupational health services should have access to appropriate facilities for carrying
out the analyses and tests necessary for surveillance of the workers' health and of the
working environment.
40.
(1) Within the framework of a multidisciplinary approach, occupational health services
(a) those services which are concerned with the safety of workers in the
undertaking;
representatives and the safety and health committee, where they exist.
(2) Occupational health services and occupational safety services might be organised
41. Occupational health services should also, where necessary, have contacts with external services and
bodies dealing with questions of health, hygiene, safety, vocational rehabilitation, retraining and
reassignment, working conditions and the welfare of workers, as well as with inspection services and
with the national body which has been designated to take part in the International Occupational Safety
and Health Hazard Alert System set up within the framework of the International Labour Organisation.
42. The person in charge of an occupational health service should be able, in accordance with the
provisions of Paragraph 38, to consult the competent authority, after informing the employer and the
workers' representatives in the undertaking or the safety and health committee, where they exist, on the
43. The occupational health services of a national or multinational enterprise with more than one
establishment should provide the highest standard of services, without discrimination, to the workers in
all its establishments, regardless of the place or country in which they are situated.
V. General Provisions
44.
(1) Within the framework of their responsibility for their employees' health and safety,
employers should take all necessary measures to facilitate the execution of the duties of
45. The occupational health-related facilities provided by the occupational health services should not
46. In cases where occupational health services are established and their functions specified by national
laws or regulations, the manner of financing these services should also be so determined.
47. For the purpose of this Recommendation the term workers' representatives in the
undertaking means persons who are recognised as such under national law or practice.
48. This Recommendation, which supplements the Occupational Health Services Convention, 1985,