#E0027 COVID-19 measurements at the workplace in various industries and company sizes: a 2-month follow-up cohort study of full-time employees in Japan

Occupational Health Practice/Occupational Health Practitioner

Trends in the Implementation of COVID-19 Related Preventive Measures at Workplaces in Japan


The novel coronavirus that emerged in December 2019 soon spread all across the world resulting in a global pandemic. Given its rapid transmission and high number of asymptomatic carriers, several preventive measures were recommended at workplaces by global and regional health authorities including the Japan Society for Occupational Health. However, limited data was available on the extent to which these measures were practically implemented in real work settings.


Thus, researchers sought to investigate the implementation of preventive workplace measures across Japan from the beginning of the outbreak and changes in the subsequent months, in their study published in the journal of Environmental and Occupational Health Practice. They conducted an online survey evaluating employee responses from a cohort of 987 individuals employed full-time, across two time frames, T1 (March 2020) and T2 (May 2020) following the declaration of an emergency in Japan in response to COVID-19. The survey items were categorized as preventive measures taken by individuals at the workplace; quarantine criteria and leave policy when infected or upon clinical contact; information on high-risk candidates and duration of special measures. In addition, a reduction in face-to-face meetings and domestic business trips were included at T2.


Participants were categorized based on the type and size of the company, demographic variables and geographical areas. The analysis revealed that there was a significant increase in communication to the employees, and implementation of preventive measures between T1 and T2, particularly in terms of temperature measurement enforcement, teleworking, changing the work environment layout, social distancing and disinfection of the workplace. The researchers noted that the frequency of measures not being implemented was initially higher in smaller companies with less than 50 employees, compared to larger companies, and in transportation and construction related industries ; this disparity however decreased by T2.


These findings suggest an overall improvement in the implementation of preventive measures as per directives from the first outbreak of COVID-19 in Japan. The researchers emphasize on the need for additional support to smaller enterprises that are more vulnerable to employee lay off and losses in such testing times; and the importance of tailored precautionary guidelines that cater to the specific occupational needs of different industries.


 

Link to the original journal article:
https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/eohp/3/1/3_2020-0017-OA/_article



Title of the paper:
COVID-19 measurements at the workplace in various industries and company sizes: a 2-month follow-up cohort study of full-time employees in Japan



Authors:
Natsu Sasaki, Kotaro Imamura, Mayumi Kataoka, Reiko Kuroda, Kanami Tsuno, Utako Sawada, Hiroki Asaoka, Mako Iida, Norito Kawakami



DOI:
10.1539/eohp.2020-0017-OA

This article is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
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