International Commission on Occupational Health

The International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH), is an international non-governmental professional society, founded in Milan during the Expo 1906 as the Permanent Commission on Occupational Health.

The International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH) aims at fostering the scientific progress, knowledge and development of occupational health and safety in all its aspects. Today, ICOH is the world's leading international scientific society in the field of occupational health with a membership of 2,000 professionals from 93 countries and is recognised by the United Nations as a non-governmental organisation (NGO) with close working relationships with ILO, WHO, UNEP and ISSA.

ICOH Activities

The most visible activities of ICOH are the triennial World Congresses on Occupational Health, which are usually attended by some 3,000 participants. The 2000 Congress was held in Singapore, the 2003 Congress in Iguassu Falls (Brazil), the 2006 Centennial Congress in Milan, (Italy), the 2009 Congress in Cape Town (South Africa), ICOH 2012 Congress in Cancun (Mexico), while ICOH 2015 was held in Seoul (Republic of Korea). The next ICOH Congress will be held in Dublin (Ireland) in 2018, while ICOH 2021 will be held Melbourne (Australia).

At the ICOH 2006 General Assembly, the President highlighted the overriding importance of permanent training and education of experts in order to face the rapidly changing world of work, the need to develop occupational health services throughout the world (including the development and dissemination of Basic Occupational Health Services - BOHS), the importance of creating BOHS guidelines, tools, training, and pilot projects and the intention of making a global survey on the OHS situation in ICOH member countries. Cooperation with World Health Organization, International Labour Organization and other NGO partners is among the priorities of the current ICOH Strategy (ICOH Centennial Declaration).[1]

Presidents and Secretaries General from ICOH foundation

Presidents: M. De Cristoforis 1906 - 1915, L. Devoto 1915 - 1936, D. Glibert 1936 - 1940, T. Stowell 1948 - 1951, P. Mazell 1951 - 1954, S. Forssman 1954 - 1969, L. Noro 1969 - 1975, E. Vigliani 1975 - 1981, R. Murray 1981 - 1987, S. Hernberg 1987 - 1993, J. F. Caillard 1993 - 2000, B. Knave 2000 - 2003, J. Rantanen 2003 - 2009, K. Kogi 2009–2015, J. Takala 2015-present.

Secretaries General: L. Carozzi 1906 - 1957, E. Vigliani 1957 - 1975, R. Murray 1975 - 1981, L. Parmeggiani 1981 - 1988, J. Jeyaratnam 1989 - 2000, K. S. Chia 2000 - 2003, S. Iavicoli 2003–present.

Current ICOH Officers and Board Members

Officers

Board Members

ICOH Scientific Committees

ICOH has 35 Scientific Committees and one Network. They cover a broad scope of challenges and problems in work life, including traditional risks of occupational injuries and diseases, and the risks of “new work life”. The Scientific Committees focus specifically on the areas of competence and promote and carry out research in their respective fields. Most of these committees have regular symposia, scientific monographs and review the abstracts submitted to the International Congresses.

  1. Accident Prevention
  2. Aging and Work
  3. Allergy and Immunotoxicology
  4. Cardiology in OH
  5. Education and Training in OH
  6. Emergency Response in OH
  7. Epidemiology in OH
  8. Health Services Research and Evaluation in OH
  9. History of Prevention of Occupational and Environmental Diseases
  10. Indoor Air Quality and Health
  11. Industrial Hygiene
  12. Mining in Occupational Health and Safety
  13. Musculoskeletal Disorders
  14. Nanomaterial Workers Health
  15. Neurotoxicology and Psychophysiology
  16. Occupational and Environmental Dermatoses
  17. Occupational Health Nursing
  18. Occupational Medicine
  19. Occupational Toxicology
  20. OH and Development
  21. OH for Health Care Workers
  22. OH in the Chemical Industry (MEDICHEM)
  23. OH in the Construction Industry
  24. Radiation and Work
  25. Reproductive Hazards in the Workplace
  26. Respiratory Disorders
  27. Rural Health: Agriculture, Pesticides and Organic Dusts
  28. Shiftwork and Working Time
  29. Small-Scale Enterprises and the Informal Sector
  30. Thermal Factors
  31. Toxicology of Metals
  32. Unemployment, Job Insecurity and Health
  33. Vibration and Noise
  34. Women Health and Work
  35. Work and Vision
  36. Work Disability Prevention and Integration
  37. Work Organisation and Psychosocial Factors

ICOH Concrete Actions for the Asbestos Ban

ICOH relations with International Organizations (WHO, ILO) have received critiques, notably on the issue of asbestos: "Part of the explanation for this bland acceptance of the asbestos cancer epidemic is that the WHO and the ILO have allowed organizations such as the International Commission on occupational Health (ICOH) and other asbestos industry consultants and experts to manipulate them and to distort the scientific evidence. The WHO and the ILO were lulled into inaction by conflicting scientific reports of the epidemic."[2]

Actually, ICOH has set among its main priorities the Asbestos Ban, taking a very clear position in favour of the global ban of asbestos. Through its official bodies and individual members ICOH took actions at all levels of activity, global, national and workplace levels:

  1. After the "Call for an International ban for asbestos" produced by the Collegium Ramazzini, the ICOH Officers Meeting in Paris, 30–31 August 1999, chaired by the ICOH President at that time, Professor Jean-Francois Caillard, decided to endorse it. Furthermore the endorsement of the "Call for an International ban for asbestos" was approved by the ICOH 2nd General Assembly on 1 September 2000, in connection with the ICOH 2000 Congress.
  2. The need for a continuous follow-up was recognised during ICOH 2000-2002 triennium and the ICOH President, Prof. Bengt Knave, decided to establish a Task Group on Asbestos (including members of the Board), that presented in the ICOH Board Meeting of 1–2 March 2002, an article by Benedetto Terracini "World Asbestos Congress: Past, Present and Future, Osasco (Brazil) 17–20 September 2000", as a report. The article was endorsed by the Board.
  3. The European Conference on Asbestos 2003 on 3–6 September 2003, drafted and adopted the “Dresden Declaration on Protection of Workers against Asbestos”. The Declaration was drafted with strong input by ICOH President and the Secretary of the Scientific Committee on Industrial Hygiene and it summarizes the contemporary effort of ICOH which has the scientific role to “provide guidance and support for a well-governed process to eliminate the use of asbestos”. For this aim, ICOH Past President, Prof. Jorma Rantanen, during the 13th Session of the Joint ILO/WHO Committee on Occupational Health made the proposal for elimination of asbestos related diseases as a priority for ILO/WHO collaboration. The Committee unanimously approved the proposal.
  4. ICOH commitment in this field was also attested by the full support to the Asian Asbestos Conference 2006 organized in Thailand on 26–27 July 2006 by the Ministry of Public Health and co-sponsored by the International Labour Office (ILO), the World Health Organization (WHO), International Ban Asbestos Secretariat (IBAS) and the International Commission on Occupational Health (ICOH). During the Conference, Prof. Jorma Rantanen declared ICOH's unequivocal support for a global asbestos ban; this position is rooted in the experiences of ICOH members who have observed the dire consequences of hazardous asbestos exposures on their patients in industrialized countries. Prof. Rantanen urged that concerted action be taken by international agencies, national governments, trade unions and NGOs to raise awareness of the asbestos hazard and to highlight the long-term economic benefits of transferring to non-asbestos technologies.
  5. The "Bangkok Declaration", recalling the ILO resolution on Asbestos, the ILO Conventions on Occupational Cancer (No. 139), the Safety in the Use of Asbestos, the WHO Global Strategy on Occupational Health for All and the WHA Resolution 58.22 on Cancer Prevention and Control and considering the ICOH International Code of Ethics for Occupational Health Professionals, declared the support of its signatories for a global asbestos ban and was widely disseminated through many networks.
  6. For the triennium 2009-2012, a new ICOH Working Group on the Elimination of Asbestos-related Diseases was set. The Working Group mainly focused on examining the existing regulations and bans in order to develop specific recommendation for actions and guidelines.
  7. ICOH continued its efforts on this specific issue through the ICOH Statement: Global Asbestos Ban and the Elimination of Asbestos-Related Diseases.To accomplish such elimination, ICOH urges each and every individual country to implement a total ban on production and use of asbestos. ICOH also urges complementary efforts aimed at primary, secondary and tertiary prevention of asbestos-related diseases through country-specific “National Programmes for Elimination of Asbestos-Related Diseases” in line with ILO and WHO guidelines.[3]

At the national level the expert input of ICOH members to the decisions concerning the ban of asbestos can be found for example in Finland, Sweden, Germany, Japan and Norway. The ICOH members also were most instrumental in production of the "Asbestos, asbestosis, and cancer: the Helsinki criteria for diagnosis and attribution"[4]- a document that has been taken in use in everyday practices in diagnosing, recognition and compensation of asbestos related diseases and has also been used in courts in some countries in defence of victims of the diseased persons. ICOH members also train the experts in occupational medicine and safety by using the research and criteria documents as a support for education.

ICOH Core Documents

See also

External links

References

  1. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/multimedia/core_documents/pdf/centennial_declaration.pdf
  2. LaDou, Joseph (2004-03-01). "The Asbestos Cancer Epidemic" (abstract page). Environmental Health Perspectives. US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. 112 (3): 285–290. doi:10.1289/ehp.6704. PMC 1241855Freely accessible. PMID 14998741. Retrieved 2006-08-03.
  3. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/ico_homepage.asp
  4. Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment and Health 1997;23:p.311–6, "Asbestos, asbestosis, and cancer: the Helsinki criteria for diagnosis and attribution. Proceedings of an International Expert Meeting". People and Work. Research Reports 14. Finnish Institute of Occupational Health 1997. 98 p.
  5. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/multimedia/core_documents/pdf/constitution_eng.pdf
  6. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/multimedia/core_documents/pdf/bye_laws_eng.pdf
  7. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/multimedia/core_documents/pdf/code_ethics_eng.pdf
  8. http://www.icohweb.org/site_new/multimedia/core_documents/pdf/ICOH%20-%20Good%20Association%20Practice%202009.pdf
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