Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana
The clothing manufacturing industry is generally perceived as a safe place to work. Compared to other industries, there are relatively few serious accidents in clothing plants. The major health risks in this industry do not arise from immediate, potentially fatal hazards. Instead, the risks that cl...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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The Institute of Textiles and Fashion Professionals – Ghana
2019-03-01
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| Series: | Fashion and Textiles Review |
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| Online Access: | https://journal.itfpgh.com/ftr/article/view/11 |
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| author | Thomas O. Asare Abdul F. Ibrahim Micheal Obeng Nyarko |
| author_facet | Thomas O. Asare Abdul F. Ibrahim Micheal Obeng Nyarko |
| author_sort | Thomas O. Asare |
| collection | DOAJ |
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The clothing manufacturing industry is generally perceived as a safe place to work. Compared to other industries, there are relatively few serious accidents in clothing plants. The major health risks in this industry do not arise from immediate, potentially fatal hazards. Instead, the risks that clothing workers face are the types whose effect accumulates over time. This paper describes health and safety compliance level in the Ghanaian garment manufacturing industry. Qualitative research method was used to examine the nature of prevailing conditions at the garment manufacturing workshop with particular reference to safety environmental compliance in the Kumasi, Accra and Tema Metropolis. Interview and observation were employed to obtain data from respondents. Grounded theory analysis was employed in the data analysis. The study revealed that, sewing machine operators at the local industry show little concern about safety and healthy environmental compliance. Workers at the clothing industry were not bothered about the long-term effects regarding safety lapses at their job places. It was recommended that fashion design institutions, government agencies and the local garment associations should collaborate to organise training workshops for garment workers on safety and its related hazards.
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| format | Article |
| id | doaj-art-a32efb7dae2645318bbc067eaebfcb1e |
| institution | OA Journals |
| issn | 2665-0983 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2019-03-01 |
| publisher | The Institute of Textiles and Fashion Professionals – Ghana |
| record_format | Article |
| series | Fashion and Textiles Review |
| spelling | doaj-art-a32efb7dae2645318bbc067eaebfcb1e2025-08-20T01:55:19ZengThe Institute of Textiles and Fashion Professionals – GhanaFashion and Textiles Review2665-09832019-03-01110.35738/ftr.v1.2019.04Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana Thomas O. Asare0Abdul F. Ibrahim1Micheal Obeng Nyarko 2Department of Fashion Design and Textiles Studies, Kumasi Technical University, Kumasi, GhanaDepartment of Textile Design and Technology, Takoradi Technical University, Takoradi, GhanaDepartments of Fashion Design and Textiles Studies, Kumasi Technical University, Kumasi, Ghana The clothing manufacturing industry is generally perceived as a safe place to work. Compared to other industries, there are relatively few serious accidents in clothing plants. The major health risks in this industry do not arise from immediate, potentially fatal hazards. Instead, the risks that clothing workers face are the types whose effect accumulates over time. This paper describes health and safety compliance level in the Ghanaian garment manufacturing industry. Qualitative research method was used to examine the nature of prevailing conditions at the garment manufacturing workshop with particular reference to safety environmental compliance in the Kumasi, Accra and Tema Metropolis. Interview and observation were employed to obtain data from respondents. Grounded theory analysis was employed in the data analysis. The study revealed that, sewing machine operators at the local industry show little concern about safety and healthy environmental compliance. Workers at the clothing industry were not bothered about the long-term effects regarding safety lapses at their job places. It was recommended that fashion design institutions, government agencies and the local garment associations should collaborate to organise training workshops for garment workers on safety and its related hazards. https://journal.itfpgh.com/ftr/article/view/11Occupational healthsafetygarmentgarment manufacturing industryworkshops |
| spellingShingle | Thomas O. Asare Abdul F. Ibrahim Micheal Obeng Nyarko Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana Fashion and Textiles Review Occupational health safety garment garment manufacturing industry workshops |
| title | Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana |
| title_full | Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana |
| title_fullStr | Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana |
| title_full_unstemmed | Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana |
| title_short | Occupational Health and Safety Status of the Workers in the Garment Industry in Ghana |
| title_sort | occupational health and safety status of the workers in the garment industry in ghana |
| topic | Occupational health safety garment garment manufacturing industry workshops |
| url | https://journal.itfpgh.com/ftr/article/view/11 |
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