Abroad|14/03/23

SPAIN: a new strategy for occupational safety and health 2023-2027

Home > The news of EUROGIP and occupational risks in Europe > SPAIN: a new strategy for occupational safety and health 2023-2027

At the end of February, the government and the social partners signed the 2023-2027 strategy for safety and health at work. The strategy “is based on two fundamental pillars: prevention and collaboration, with a global approach, and the equal protection of the physical and mental health of workers”, said the Minister of Labour and Social Economy, Yolanda Díaz.

The strategy has been developed around six strategic objectives:

  • Improving the prevention of occupational accidents and diseases
  • Managing the changes brought about by new forms of work organisation, demographic change and climate change
  • Improving health and safety management in SMEs and for the self-employed
  • Strengthening the protection of workers in the most vulnerable situations
  • Introducing a gender perspective in the field of occupational safety and health
  • Strengthening the national occupational health and safety system to cope successfully with future crises.

It is also worth noting that mental health appears for the first time among the priorities and the launch of a national programme for the prevention of occupational cancers.

The government and the social partners will draw up an action plan for the next two years. “An emergency according to the Secretary for Occupational Health, Ana García de la Torre, who recalled that in 2022, 826 people died at work. This is 121 more than the previous year, an increase of 17.2% in fatal accidents”, according to IR Notes.

Find out more

Discover other news

Abroad

27/06/24

AUSTRIA: More accidents at work and on the way to work in 2023

According to data published by the Austrian Social insurance for occupational injuries (AUVA) in mid-June, 145,748 claims were registered last year, broken down as follows 29,866 accidents (at work and and students), 13,062 commuting accidents and 2,820 cases of occupational diseases. While the number of accidents (at work and on the way to work) has increased, the number of occupational diseases has decreased compared to 2022.

Abroad

27/06/24

GERMANY: in 2023, the number of fatal accidents at work and commuting accidents was lower than ever before

The number of accidents at work in 2023 to declare was lower than in 2019: 783,426 compared with 871,547. This is a record number if we exclude the years 2020 to 2022, which were heavily influenced by the Covid-19 pandemic. The number of fatal accidents at work and on the way to work was also at an all-time low, and the number of occupational diseases reported and recognised fell sharply.

Abroad

27/06/24

DENMARK: faster processing of workers’ compensation claims

New rules, which come into force on 1 July, are designed to give victims of accidents at work a quicker response to their claim for compensation. From now on, employers, doctors and local authorities will be liable to a fine if they fail to provide information within the statutory time limit, i.e. no later than 14 days after the first day of absence, if the accident has resulted in the employee being unable to work or absent from work after the day of the accident.