NZ Outdoor Workers Poorly Protected from the Sun
NZ Outdoor Workers Poorly Protected from the Sun:
Otago Research
New Zealand outdoor workers
are generally poorly protected from solar UV radiation, with
only around one-third wearing sunscreen or a suitably
protective hat, according to a University of Otago study
published in the latest issue of the international
Journal of Occupational Health.
The
study’s findings also indicate that collective workplace
action may be the key to reducing harmful sun exposure and
associated skin cancer risk.
The research is the
largest New Zealand study of its kind and surveyed the
sun-protective practices, equipment provision and workplace
culture of more than 1,000 workers across nine outdoor
occupational groups. Outdoor workers make up nearly 15
percent of the New Zealand workforce.
Study lead
author Associate Professor Tony Reeder says the findings
showed that the average levels of personal sun protection
were poor across all nine groups (forestry, roading,
sawmilling, postal delivery, viticulture, landscaping,
construction, horticulture, and farming).
Personal
protection was scored on practices such as wearing hats,
shirts, other protective clothing, sunglasses, and
sunscreen. Hat wearing was the most commonly reported
protective practice, but only one-third of hats worn were
types that shaded the face, neck and ears. The two least
common practices were using moveable shade structures and
limiting sun exposure between 10am and 4pm.
“After adjusting for the demographic make-up of
the groups, we found that forestry, horticulture,
construction and farming were the sectors with the lowest
average personal sun protection scores. Viticulture was the
highest scoring group, but still only managed 3.2 out of a
possible score of 8,” Associate Professor Reeder
says.
Aside from workers’ awareness of how easily
their skin tended to burn, there was no significant link
between their sun-protection knowledge and personal
protection scores, he says. Attitudes towards tanning were
only relatively weakly associated with actual protective
practices.
“However, we found good evidence that
employees were more likely to protect themselves if their
workplaces provided sun-protective equipment and supported
and promoted its use.”
The findings suggest that
significant improvements are unlikely to be achieved by
educational strategies alone, says Dr
Reeder.
“Our research suggests that workplaces
need to lead the way by providing appropriate protective
gear and promoting a collective culture in which sun
protection is seen as a priority,” he
says.
Currently, skin cancer accounts for about 80
percent of new cancers registered in New Zealand each year,
or 70,000 cases. Around 2,000 are melanoma, which represents
one of the highest rates in the world, and more than 400 New
Zealanders die of skin cancer each year.
Associate
Professor Reeder says that, given the burden that skin
cancer places on the health system and the toll it takes on
sufferers, it is time to get serious about limiting harmful
occupational exposure to ultraviolet radiation.
To help further this, he and colleague Bronwen
McNoe made a Cancer Society Social & Behavioural Research
Unit submission to the NZ Independent Taskforce on Workplace
Health & Safety seeking to require this exposure to be
addressed by the development of a SunSmart culture in the
workplace.
“This is a basic health and safety
issue for outdoor workers and New Zealand really needs to do
better in this
regard.”
ENDS