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HHD Hosts Youth Worker Safety Workshop
Most of the eighty percent of teens who work enjoy a positive and enriching
experience. However, teenagers in the workplace may be at risk for injuries
on the job due to inadequate safety training, unsafe equipment, and stressful
environments. Real-life horror stories, though rare, tell of teens being
crushed by forklifts or shot during robberies. Youth may also face discrimination
or sexual harassment by coworkers.
FAST FACTS
Every year:
- 200,000 teens are injured on the job in the U.S.
- 100,000 teens require emergency room
treatment
- 70 teens die as a result of their injuries
Source: The National Young Worker Safety Resource
Center |
To address the safety needs of teen workers, HHD’s Center
for the Study and Prevention of Injury, Violence, and Suicide is
collaborating with U.C. Berkeley's Labor Occupational Health Program
(LOHP) to form The
National Young Worker Safety Resource Center (YWSRC). The
Center is funded by Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) and provides training for the staff of school and community-based
job readiness and placement programs, preparing them to teach teens
about occupational safety and health. The center also provides
seminars, technical assistance, and resources to employers and
education and employment-related organizations serving youth to
improve the safety of young workers.
Chris Miara, Project Director of YWSRC, stresses the importance of a
comprehensive approach to young worker safety: “Protecting the
health and safety of teen workers requires strong laws that are enforced,
training and education, and data on the scope of the problem. No single
agency has the responsibility for implementing all these strategies.
That’s why we have encouraged the development of state-level partnerships
among a variety of key players.”
Forming and educating State teams to work on projects that reduce risk
of injury to teen workers is proving to be a promising approach to promoting
healthy workplaces for youth. These state teams are coalitions of agencies
and organizations whose goal is to protect the safety and health of young
people in the workplace.
To mobilize State teams, EDC recently hosted “The Young Worker
Safety Resource Center: National Workshop”. Teams comprising representatives
from state departments of education, labor, and health from 12 states,
as well as employers, occupational safety professionals, and federal
agency personnel convened to discuss ways they are integrating the YWSRC’s
curriculum, Youth @ Work: Talking Safety, into schools, job
training programs, and health education settings.
The participants spent the day sharing their experiences using and institutionalizing Youth
@ Work: Talking Safety, a young worker safety curriculum developed
by YWSRC. Participants also discussed other activities and resources
they use to promote workplace safety for teens, such as educational
materials for teens and parents, regulations requiring safety training
for teachers who place youth in jobs, and workshops for employers.
Lastly, participants described the challenges they encountered while
carrying out these activities and shared strategies to address these
difficulties.
At the workshop, The National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH) presented its independent, national evaluation of the Youth
@ Work curriculum, which was piloted in ten states. The evaluation
concluded that, while students can typically identify job hazards before
training, the curriculum adds value by imparting new knowledge about:
(1) young worker rights and responsibilities; (2) how to control or eliminate
hazards; and (3) what to do in workplace emergencies.
According to Miara, “We have used the Youth @ Work curriculum
with thousands of students around the country. While teachers and
students are very positive about the training and our pre- and post-tests
always show gains in knowledge, it was very gratifying, first of all,
to know that NIOSH was interested in evaluating the curriculum, and second,
that the evaluators found it to be effective in conveying the key points
young people need to learn.”
Workshop participants agreed that the lessons learned will continue
to inform their work in protecting youth workers. As a result of the
workshop, one participant noted: “I plan to build additional partnerships
with my state’s youth apprenticeship program, Department of Public
Instruction, and other businesses.”
April 7 , 2006 |