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State: Ntl. Paduda: Does Comp Care About Workers?: [2025-12-05] |
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I have my doubts.
Joe Paduda Despite all the chest beating about worker safety and injury worker advocacy, few “industry leaders” have acknowledged a very serious issue: the failure to aggressively address heat risk. We now know, from extremely well-done research, that smart, well-implemented regulations can save workers’ lives. California led the way on protections for workers, and its leadership likely saved dozens of lives. This is from research just published in the latest HealthAffairs:
The HealthAffairs piece followed a detailed analysis of all 2023 injuries reported to OSHA. It found that increasing heat increases all injuries in all occupations, especially in states without heat protection rules.
The Trump administration appears to have dropped efforts to implement OSHA standards for heat protection; the regs, which went through a far too lengthy development and approval process, have not moved since Trump’s inauguration. (Note that the Trump administration also gutted NIOSH, in the process eliminating work on PFAS exposure risk, firefighter protections, cancer risk for health care workers and mining safety.) What does this mean for you? You don’t care about worker safety and worker health if you don’t actively support heat protections for all workers. Joseph Paduda is the principal of Health Strategy Associates, a consulting firm focused on improving medical management programs in workers’ compensation. This column is republished with his permission from his Managed Care Matters blog. |
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