|
HIV/AIDS In The Workplace From The Perspective Of An Occupational Medicine Practitioner - Lecture |
OBJECTIVES OF THIS LECTURE:
This lecture will present you with the following aspects of the problem of HIV-AIDS in the workplace:
- Epidemiology.
- Legal considerations.
- Organisational response.
- Primary prevention: prevent infection.
- Secondary prevention: early diagnosis and appropriate treatment.
- Tertiary prevention: accomodation, disability management.
EPIDEMIOLOGY:
Question: What is HIV status of this workforce?
This may be approached in two ways:
- By direct measurement, as is the case in the Gold Mining industry and the Public Health Services:
- Indirectly: Regional prevalence is adjusted for differences of workforce from surveillance populations, or from modelled prevalence
LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS:
Question: What laws are relevant to the management of HIV/AIDS in the workplace?
1. Employment Equity Act, 1998:
- Unfair discrimination on HIV status prohibited.
- Employer initiated HIV testing restricted.
2. Promotion Of Equality And Prevention Of Unfair Discrimination Act, 2000:
- Prohibits unfair discrimination.
- Applies to workplaces not covered by EEA.
3. Labour Relations Act, 1996:
- Procedures for dismissal due to incapacity.
- No exclusion from benefits.
4. COIDA, 1993:
5. OHSA, 1993; MHSA, 1996:
- Obligation to provide safe, healthy workplace, (for example, by providing health care workers, emergency workers).
6. Medical Schemes Act, 1998:
- Non discrimination on benefits.
- Minimum benefits.
7. Basic Conditions of Employment Act, 1997
- Caters, inter alia, for sick leave
8. Constitution (1996) and Common Law:
- Addresses issues with respect to the Right to Privacy
ORGANISATIONAL RESPONSE:
Question: What should management be doing?
The management's response can be manifested in four ways:
- Conducting impact assessment.
- Securing worker participation.
- Writing a policy.
- Implementing a prevention programme.
Impact assessment:
- Absenteeism, decreased productivity.
- Turnover, training costs.
- Direct health care (for example, the mining health services).
- Medical scheme contributions.
- Disability/medical retirement/life assurance.
- Management/industrial relations: effort and cost.
- Market perceptions/investment.
Securing employee participation:
Writing a policy (see separate note):
- Paper exercise vs. implementation?
- What are the elements?
Implement a prevention (and treatment) programme:
- Primary prevention.
- Secondary preventions.
- Tertiary prevention.
PRIMARY PREVENTION:
Question: Can new infections among employees be prevented?
Information , awareness, group education:
- Understand what works.
- Need gender sensitivity.
Peer education.
Condom provision.
Universal precautions in first aid.
Supporting voluntary counselling and testing.
Treatment of sexually transmitted illness.
Supporting community prevention programmes.
SECONDARY PREVENTION:
Question: What can HIV infected employees be offered?
Confidentiality.
Counselling and support.
Referral to, liaison with other health services.
Control of occupational hazards (for example, TB).
Treatment:
Medical scheme benefits.
On site?
- Periodic checks for infections (thrush, RTI, other fungal, herpes, GI/diarrhoea, TB, etc.).
- Supervised TB treatment.
- Antiviral herpes treatment.
- Prophylaxis: cotrimoxazole, INH.
- Nutritional support - ?.
- Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
TERTIARY PREVENTION:
Question: What can be done for employees suffering from complications of HIV infection/AIDS?
Confidentiality.
Accomodation.
Disability process.
Postgraduate Diploma in Occupational Health (DOH) - Modules 3 � 5: Occupational Medicine & Toxicology by Prof Rodney Ehrlich & Prof Mohamed Jeebhay is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Source available from here.Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://www.healthedu.uct.ac.za/