Lo studio riporta dati sull’esposizione ai pericoli, sugli incidenti sul lavoro e sui problemi di salute per le donne che lavorano, approfondendo alcuni temi tra cui le esposizioni:
– tumori professionali
– accesso alla riabilitazione
– lavoro informale
– caratteristiche delle professioni femminili prevalenti
In particolare:
– rischi psicosociali: le donne sono più soggette degli uomini a discriminazioni multiple per sesso, età, origine etnica, disabilità, e orientamento sessuale
– divario retributivo il rapporto evidenzia che la situazione dal 2003 non è migliorata: le donne, a pari mansione, percepiscono stipendi di circa il 16% più bassi di quelli percepiti dagli uomini
This report presents an update to the Agency’s previous research on gender issues at work, which found that inequality both inside and outside the workplace can have an effect on the health and safety of women at work.
It provides a policy perspective and is meant to contribute to the task outlined by the European strategy on health and safety at work for EU-OSHA’s European Risk Observatory, “examining the specific challenges in terms of health and safety posed by the more extensive integration of women in the labour market”.
It provides a statistical overview of the trends in employment and working conditions, hazard exposure and work-related accidents and health problems for women at work.
It explores selected issues (combined exposures, occupational cancer, access to rehabilitation, women and informal work, and “emerging” female professions such as home care and domestic work).
The research highlights the type of work carried out by women, issues faced by younger and older women, the growth of the service sector, violence and harassment, and increasingly diversified working time patterns as major risk factors.