Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Measurement of Working Capacity in Populations
- Functional Consequences of Malnutrition
- Growth, Stature and Muscular Efficiency
- Ethnic and Socio-Cultural Differences in Working Capacity
- Energy Expenditure and Endemic Disease
- Research Models in Tropical Ecosystems
- Biosocial consequences of illness among small scale farmers: a research design
- The tea plantation as a research ecosystem
- Index
The tea plantation as a research ecosystem
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Measurement of Working Capacity in Populations
- Functional Consequences of Malnutrition
- Growth, Stature and Muscular Efficiency
- Ethnic and Socio-Cultural Differences in Working Capacity
- Energy Expenditure and Endemic Disease
- Research Models in Tropical Ecosystems
- Biosocial consequences of illness among small scale farmers: a research design
- The tea plantation as a research ecosystem
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
The papers given so far in this meeting have reported on studies of many aspects of work performance, affecting different occupational groups with varied employment and patterns of work. Each gives a picture of one small part of the complex life of an individual or of an occupationally-defined group. This paper looks ahead to research needs and opportunities, and specifically to a situation where occupational performance can be related to the other aspects of life and health.
The conference has brought together workers of many disciplines, it has shown the relation of nutrition, of physical environment and of infection to work performance and productivity, and by doing this has shown in a precise and quantitative form what had been vaguely and generally felt, that productivity depends on the worker's wellbeing in a set of complex ways. Such a conclusion has several implications for the pattern of future research: it shows that quantitative studies are possible and opens up the linkages between health broadly defined and the economy. It suggests also that the demarcation between work and the rest of life, so convenient for legislation and for the development of the profession of occupational health, has marked limitations. But if we are to study productivity and occupational performance in the context of the rest of life there are real difficulties in finding a tractable system.
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- Capacity for Work in the Tropics , pp. 277 - 288Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988
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