The UN World Day for Safety and Health at Work is marked every April and each event concentrates on a specific theme each year. In 2024 it is drawing attention to the impacts of climate change on occupational health and safety. These include excessive heat, air pollution, and UV radiation. Even without the effects of climate change, these would be a core issue in the Gulf region given its natural environment.
Global health and safety trends include a greater emphasis on occupational health, investing in personal protective equipment, and treating employee well-being as just as important as preventing the most serious accidents.
The UAE has incorporated both global trends and local factors into increased regulation and guidance. Recent developments include greater use of technology to improve safety and a growing emphasis on making health and safety an ingrained culture rather than simply concentrating on following checklists.
The five pillars that make up Imdaad’s Health and Safety strategy are:
Each one is integral to promoting a culture of collective awareness and responsibility for reducing risk.
This structure isn’t simply about administration or bureaucracy but about reminding employees of Imdaad’s approach. Every health and safety measure is important in its own right but also contributes to an overall program that makes safe practice the default. The changes have already led to a halving in the amount of injuries that led to lost work time.
The work includes combining technology and operational change. For example, a mobile app helps site operation managers walk through health and safety checks, making sure nothing is overlooked. Meanwhile, a programme of site visits by senior staff to monitor health and safety has been introduced alongside a dedicated reporting system makes it easier for staff to flag up any “near misses” that could easily be overlooked. These reports are vital to fixing problem areas before they turn into more serious incidents.
The World Day for Safety and Health at Work is an important reminder that the battle to make safety and wellness part of the work culture goes on. It shows that safety and health is a concern for every business, no matter its size, location, or industry.
At the same time, businesses must remember to take the local view. Adapting the big picture message to the specific needs and challenges of a particular company is the only way to turn the awareness day into action.
In turn, individual staff members need to think about what they could do to make a difference. This isn’t just about specific measures related to a task or industry, but about the safeguards, procedures, and principles that make occupational health and safety the default position.