The Portuguese observatory on occupational psychosocial factors: contribution for public health
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European Journal of Public Health
Abstract
To achieve the goal of sustainable employment, considering
the profile of the Portuguese working population (PWP), is
needed a range of strategies to ensure long, productive, and
sustainable careers allied with a better quality of working life,
health, and wellbeing, but also with public health policies
grounded on scientifically validated and reliable data. This is
possible through a comprehensive working system approach
that ensures workers will be mentally and physically able to
remain at work by the balance between work demands and
individual resources allied with public health policies transfer
into the workplaces by organizations’ leadership and policy
makers. The Portuguese Observatory on Occupational Factors
(Popsy@Work) aims at addressing this global challenge by: i)
digitally collecting psychosocial data on the PWP; ii)
implementing and strengthening of a psychosocial occupational
health surveillance digital system; iii) providing
reference values for the PWP concerning Psychosocial
Health; iv) Transferring to society knowledge and best
practices; v) Raising awareness on the importance of
psychosocial management in occupational settings based on
science. Popsy@work is a digital platform that collects and
aggregates psychosocial data analytically and creates a
visualization hub adding value to data on the PWP and
giving science back to society in a usable way, empowering
workers, strengthening organizations and grounding public
policies. Pospy@Work considers the development of strategic
intelligence on levels and inequalities of psychosocial health
and well-being in occupational settings by robust metrics and
reference data. Creating opportunities for national policy
dialogue on inequalities, including the psychosocial health of
the PWP through collaboration with diverse sectors identifying
and mapping subgroups of populations whose unmet needs
require specific outreach measures.
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4. Fernandes, C., Cotrim,T., Pereira, A., Silva, C., Bem-Haja, P., Azevedo, R., Antunes, S., Sousa Pinto, J., Silva, I. (2022). The Portuguese observatory on occupational psychosocial factors: contribution for public health. European Journal of Public Health, Volume 32, Issue Supplement_3, October 2022, ckac130.196, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckac130.196