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IOSH funds research on maritime work-related ill-health

Date posted
28 March 2025
Type
Press release
Author
Marcus Boocock
Estimated reading time
2 minute read

While workplace injuries often make headlines, work-related ill-health causes significantly more suffering. The International Labour Organization estimates there are 2.6 million deaths annually from occupational diseases, compared to 330,000 from accidents.

The maritime sector is one of the world's most hazardous, less well-regulated than others, with hard-to-track negative health impacts. 

Researchers at Southampton Solent University are collaborating with industry partners on a project funded by IOSH. This seeks to address the growing challenge of work related ill-health among maritime workers. 

They will generate insights and develop an innovative toolbox to record and analyse adverse health outcomes affecting workers in UK ports and on UK-registered ships. This research aims to improve knowledge particularly around mental health issues in the maritime sector. 

Partners will include the UK’s Maritime and Coastguard Agency and Port Skills and Safety, the UK’s professional ports health and safety membership organisation. 

The comprehensive toolbox will be created at the end of the project this autumn. It will feature data collection forms, best practice guidance, instructional animations, and analytical resources specifically designed for maritime health and safety professionals.  

The kit will enable consistent recording of suspected work-related health incidents, supporting better analysis and prevention strategies. 

Dr Helen Devereux, Principal Investigator, said: “Our maritime workers are the invisible backbone of UK trade, handling 95 per cent of imports and exports. Yet when it comes to understanding their occupational health challenges, particularly mental health, we're navigating with incomplete charts.  

“This toolbox will provide the structured data collection and analysis framework needed to identify harmful patterns and prevent future illness.” 

Genis Fernandes, IOSH Research Programme Lead, said: “This project exemplifies IOSH’s commitment to evidence-based approaches in occupational safety and health.  

“By equipping practitioners with practical tools to investigate workplace health impacts, we’re addressing a critical gap between safety and health practices. The potential for this methodology to expand beyond maritime to other sectors makes it particularly valuable for advancing workplace health globally.” 

The research responds to industry attempts to better record and analyse workforce health data, such as the ‘Dashboard’ initiative by the Port Skills and Safety Organisation. At the same time the research will address persistent inconsistencies in comprehensive health data collection.

Find out more about ‘A toolbox for recording and analysing work related adverse health outcomes for workers in UK ports and onboard UK registered ships’.

IOSH has invested approximately £6.5 million in 60 research projects since establishing its research fund in 2003. This contributes to its charitable objective to promote systematic methods of improving occupational safety and health worldwide.

Last updated: 15 April 2025

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