The vast majority of working women want
maternity protection.
EHS pros play an important role in the
health protection aspects of maternity
protection. Health protection addresses risks that may
impact a worker that may be pregnant, is pregnant, or is
breastfeeding.
Here are six key steps that should be followed to
help you better understand how maternity protection
may impact your job:
- Visit the links following in this article to further
understand maternity protection.Particularly,
review the language in the ILO’s Maternity Protection
Convention No. 183 and Recommendation No. 191.
- If any segment of your company’s workforce
belongs to the AFL-CIO or other unions that may seek
maternity protection within upcoming contracts, brief
management how maternity protection health
protections may impact operations.
- Check with your company’s HR department
to see what policies and procedures
address aspects of maternity protection.
Update
procedures, as necessary, to reflect any needed occupational
safety and health involvement.
- Thoroughly review OSHA’s proposed rule
to update the hazard communication standard.
Determine the impact the rule may have on your operations
if needed to classify germ cell mutagens and
reproductive toxicants at 0.1%. Do you already have a
list of these chemicals or will a new inventory have to
be created? Brief management on your findings.
- Determine if your state has enacted any
Rules to protect people who are pregnant from environmental
exposures. Minnesota, for example, has
established airborne exposure limits (public health
criteria) for people who may be pregnant.
- Apply the risk management strategies within
ISO (FDIS) 31000 to determine what risks (and
opportunities) and treatment options your organization
faces with maternity protection. This includes
trend analysis for current and projected workplace demographics,
community and customer relationships, and
potential state or federal legislation on maternity protection.
Driving forces
The growth of women in the global workforce has
stirred renewed interest in maternity protection. For
example, women are expected to be the majority of the
U.S. workforce by the end of 2009. Women currently
comprise about 40 percent of all paid workers worldwide.
- In March 2007, the International Trade Union
Confederation (ITUC) launched a maternity protection
campaign (http://www.ituc-csi.org/IMG/pdf/
Statement_8_march_EN.pdf.) The ITUC has nearly
170 million members in 312 affiliated organizations
and 157 countries and territories.
- In January 2009, the European Trade Union
Confederation, which represents over 200 unions
throughout the EU, issued their position statement on
improvement of EU’s Pregnant Workers Directive; see
(http://www.etuc.org/IMG/pdf_ETUC_position_revision_
pregnant_workers_directive__7__EN.pdf.) EU’s
pregnant workers directive supports many of ILO’s
maternity protection provisions.
- In March 2009, the AFL-CIO, which represents
over 11 million U.S. workers, issued its “Charter
Rights of Working Women” (http://www.aflcio.org/
aboutus/thisistheaflcio/ecouncil/ec03052009n.cfm.)
These charter rights include maternity protection.
- In addition to organized labor, other organizations
have ongoing maternity protection campaigns. The one-million-
member MomsRising organization (www.momsrising.
org) in the U.S. is one example. MomsRising seeks better
maternity leave in state and federal legislation.
- OSHA’s September 30, 2009, proposed rule
(http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2009/E9-22483.htm) to
update the hazard communication standard addresses
the chemical exposure aspect of maternity protection.
Health protections, however, address more than just ionizing
radiation and chemical exposure. Other risks to
consider include: ergonomics, vibration, noise, non-ionizing
radiation, extremes of cold or heat, and exposure
to some biological agents. EU guidelines on how to conduct
a risk assessment (for all risk categories) for workers
who may be pregnant, are pregnant, or are breastfeeding
is found at (http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/
LexUriServ.do?uri=COM:2000:0466:FIN:EN:PDF.)
- Improvement in pregnancy and childbirth is a
national priority area for improvement within the U.S.
health care system (see http://www.childbirthconnection.
org/article.asp?ck=10575). Childbirth is the leading reason
for hospitalization and charges for birthing women
and newborns far exceed charges for any other condition.
Annually, private insurers and employers pay nearly $40
billion of these charges. Improvements in maternity protection
will drive down the costs of maternity care.
- Women are the majority of registered voters in
the U.S. and on a global and collective scale they represent
a growth market that is twice as big as China
and India combined.1 Knowing what women want is
now critical for success in politics and business.
ILO Maternity Protection Database at (http://www.
ilo.org/travaildatabase/servlet/maternityprotection) can
be visited to see legislative health protections that various
countries have established for workers who may be
pregnant, are pregnant, or are breastfeeding.
<./ul>
Resources
See: The Female Economy, pp. 47-53, Harvard
Business Review; September 2009. Also see,
Women Want More: How to capture Your Share
of the World’s Largest, Fastest-Growing Market
(HarperCollins, 2009).