Working conditions in international seafaring.
Occup Med (Lond). 2006 Sep; 56(6):393-7.OM

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Seafaring is a global profession and seafarers have their second home on board and live there for several months at a time.

AIM

To assess self-rated health status and the main characteristics of seafarers' working conditions.

METHODS

Questionnaire study concerning the most recent tour of duty.

RESULTS

A total of 6,461 seafarers in 11 countries responded. In general, the seafarers' self-rated health was good, but it declined significantly with age. Seafarers from South-East Asian countries spent longer time periods at sea, and had lower numbers of officers and older seafarers than found among seafarers from western countries. Most seafarers worked every day of the week, and on average for 67-70 h a week during periods of 2.5-8.5 months at sea.

CONCLUSIONS

Seafarers' self-rated health was generally good but varied significantly by country. Working conditions also differed by country but did not reflect working conditions in general. Further studies are necessary to describe more closely the influence of work schedules on the health and social life of seafarers.

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Authors+Show Affiliations

Jensen OC
Research Unit of Maritime Medicine, University of Southern Denmark, Østergade 81-83, DK-6700 Esbjerg, Denmark. OCJ@FMM.SDU.dk
Sørensen JF
No affiliation info available
Thomas M
No affiliation info available
Canals ML
No affiliation info available
Nikolic N
No affiliation info available
Hu Y
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AdultFemaleHumansMaleMultivariate AnalysisNaval MedicineOccupational DiseasesOccupational HealthOdds RatioSelf-AssessmentSurveys and QuestionnairesWork Schedule ToleranceWorkload

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

16804089