day 2 1 carter seahealth 4 12[1]
TRANSCRIPT
Medical standards and worldwide
acceptance of seafarer health certificates
Tim Carter
Norwegian Centre for Maritime Medicine
UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency
International Maritime Health Association
Who determines seafarer
medical standards?
ILO/IMO – international conventions
National maritime/health authorities aligned with national practices/laws and international conventions – output statutory certificate of fitness.
Employers/ P&I clubs – non-statutory standards as part of selection for employment.
Why are there two parallel systems?
What is the purpose of
standards?
Statutory – safeguard maritime safety and minimise risk to individuals. Detail endorsed in political process involving social partners.
Employer – as statutory + reducing costs of illness at sea, repatriation and compensation. Set unilaterally by employers,insurers.
What may standards cover?
The conduct of the examination – valid, consistent, fair, ethical, economical.
The criteria for specific impairments and medical conditions.
The process of taking decisions on fitness.
The issue of a certificate of fitness.
Appeal arrangements.
Perspectives (maritime health)
Procedures and protocols of International Agencies (ILO, IMO,WHO)
Governments (maritime – national and open register, health, social security)
Employers, agents, insurers etc.(HR, crewing, design, supply , P and I)
Seafarers, trade unions etc.(working conditions, equity, members benefits, claims)
Subject experts (risks, remedies – evidence, effectiveness)
Professional bodies (good practice – jobs, income, status)
Drivers for international
action Move from national to global crewing,
management, sourcing (fitness, repatriation)
Move from integrated owners/employers to contract management (less recruitment for defined careers, QA needs)
Inequities in risk and working conditions (‘good and bad’ flags)
Inefficiencies in current arrangements (duplication – certification, costs of poor decisions)
Fairer basis for international competition ( less variation in crewing costs, social security needs)
Building on the past
National arrangements – traditional maritime nations and newer ones. ‘Protected’ and global flags
Previous ILO, IMO, WHO initiatives
Attitudes of employers, unions and governments to health of seafarers and its regulation
Place of and trust in health advisers
Maritime health - scope
Fitness to work at sea – maritime safety, personal ‘risk’, corporate financial risk.
Managing medical emergencies at sea Onshore care, rehabilitation and repatriation Health education and promotion – personal,
environmental Safe and healthy working conditions Passenger risks Infections and spread At interface of ILO, IMO and WHO
IMO approach
STCW revisions. Sight and hearing +physical capability (1995 on). General criteria for fitness added (2012). Reluctance to accept mandatory capability criteria, acceptance for vision.
STCW about issue of certificates – dominance of these as communication mechanism
Did not wish to be involved in 1997 ILO/WHO Guidelines on medical examinations. Now participating in revisions.
IMO key text
STCW 2012 A-1/9 Vision (standards) Physical capability (recommendations) Hearing and speech (recommendations) No impairing medical condition No medical condition aggravated,
leading to unfitness or risk to others No impairing medication Procedures for examination and certification
ILO approach
MLC consolidated many earlier conventions. Parallel convention on fishing
Health scattered through MLC: certificates, medical care on board, care and repatriation, working and living conditions (weak on smoking, diet)
Social security issues: keep the doctors out!
Leading role in supporting guideline development 1997 and now.
ILO key text
MLC 1.2 medical certificate procedures
Hearing and sight
No medical condition aggravated, leading to unfitness or risk to others
MLC 2.5 medical repatriation
MLC 3.1 – 2 accommodation, food
MLC 4.1 – Medical care aboard
MLC 4.3 – occupational health and safety
Developing good practice –
medical examination guidelines
Text from MLC and STCW 2012 as basis.
Shortcomings of 1997 Guidelines
Experience of authorities and others
IMHA w.g. on medical fitness criteria
Special Adviser to ILO developed draft text
Working group to review and modify – 2 meetings 2010 and 2011.
Co-ordinated endorsement by ILO and IMO now in progress.
Users of Guidelines
Maritime Authorities in preparing national regulations
Maritime Authorities in adopting text as national law.
Examining doctors as issuers of certificates
Will they make for more acceptance of certificates internationally and by employers? Text + application in practice.
Supporting initiative – QA of examiners, additional professional guidance, training for examiners, ethical framework.
Conventions, Guidelines and
mutual acceptance of
certificates. Anticipate agreed international medical examination
framework that is detailed enough to be adopted unchanged by flag states. National laws that comply with conventions are the basis for certificate issue.
If framework used then barriers to free movement of seafarers reduced- provided states, employers and seafarers accept the advantages of a common and well founded basis for certificate issue.
Less chance of either unjustified discrimination or of preventable illness and accidents at sea.
Savings in time and cost.
Better basis for decision-taking by maritime health providers.
Barriers to mutual
acceptance
Inertia of maritime authorities
Maintaining advantage for nationals
Links to national social security
Lack of interest by ship operators who have their own PEME arrangements.
Lack of international quality assurance for conduct of examinations and certificate issue.