Decree of the Government of the Czech Republic No. 252 / 1992 Coll.
Decree of the Government of the Czech Republic on the conditions for granting and the amount of the special surcharge for carrying out activities in difficult and healthy working conditions
Valid
Effective from 12.06.1992
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252
GOVERNMENT REGULATION
Czech Republic
of 22 April 1992
on the conditions for granting and the amount of the special allowance for carrying out activities in difficult and healthy working conditions
The Government of the Czech Republic hereby orders pursuant to § 23 paragraph 1 (d) of Act No. 143 / 1992 Coll., on the salary and remuneration of on-call duty in budgetary and in certain other organisations and bodies (hereinafter referred to as "the Act"):
Scope
This Regulation lays down the conditions for the granting and the amount of the special surcharge (hereinafter referred to as the "surcharge ') for the pursuit of activities in difficult and healthy conditions for the workers of employers referred to in Paragraph 1 (1) of the Act under the responsibility of the Czech Republic.
The additional allowance shall be granted to staff members for carrying out activities in an environment in which harmful working conditions relating to the risk of harmful effects predominate and are harmful to health.
(a) professional infections;
b) ionizing and electromagnetic radiation, laser work,
(c) chemical carcinogens;
(d) other chemical pollutants; or
(e) physical effects.
(1) The activities for which the surcharge is granted are divided into two groups according to the level of risk and listed in the Annex which forms part of this Regulation.
(2) Activities not listed in the Annex and carried out in an environment in which difficult and healthy conditions prevail, which are associated with the risk of harmful effects of professional infection, ionising and electromagnetic radiation, laser, chemical carcinogens, other chemical pollutants or physical effects, the employer shall include in Group I or Group II a comparison with the activities listed in the Annex.
(1) The amount of the supplement shall be determined by the employer according to the degree of risk, intensity and duration of the harmful effects during the course of the performance of the activity of the internal salary scheme or shall be negotiated in a collective agreement
(a) for work activities listed in the first group of CZK 100 to CZK 400 per month,
b) for work activities listed in the second group in the amount of CZK 300 to CZK 700 per month.
(2) If the employee carries out various activities which are included in both groups in terms of entitlement to the supplement, the employer shall grant the employee a surcharge of at least CZK 300 per month.
(3) The facts referred to in paragraph 2 shall be taken into account when negotiating the amount of the premium in a collective agreement.
Additional payments under this Regulation shall be granted for the first time in May 1992.
This Regulation shall enter into force on the day of its publication.
Pithart v. r.
Annex to Decree of the Government of the Czech Republic No. 252 / 1992 Coll.
List of works whose performance under difficult and harmful conditions gives an additional charge
Group I
A. PROFESSIONAL INFERENCE
1. Work which may exceptionally be a source of disease, health damage or cause an occupational disease in which workers are:
- in demonstrable contact with patients when providing outpatient or bedside care,
- in apparent contact with biological material collected from patients.
Working at the risk of a specific infection (if normal human pathogens occur):
Working in an environment at the risk of a professional infectious disease, which is usually classified as light and quite exceptionally medium-heavy, requiring demanding professional competence from health workers with high requirements for strict compliance with hygiene and anti-epidemic principles. These diseases are generally not listed in the list of diseases for the provision of claim supplements - "higher level premium '(" other diseases').
1. Investigation and treatment of patients with infectious diseases and carriers of pathogens in organisations or facilities for the treatment of other diseases.
2. Collection of biological material from patients with infectious diseases caused by other diseases and carriers of pathogens including processing of these materials in laboratories.
3. Handling of laundry before disinfection in outpatient and bed facilities for treating other diseases.
4. Treatment of laboratory animals infected with other diseases.
5. Work in microbiological, immunological and other laboratories for diagnosing other diseases including decontamination and glass washing.
6. Verification including microbiological control of new cultured diagnostic soils and biochemical tests (sets) targeting other diseases.
7. Bacteriological, serological and immunological preparation of antigens, vaccines and autovaccines against other diseases.
8. Professional investigation of epidemiological, epidemiological, zoological, entomological and ecological including the implementation and control of measures in the outbreak of other diseases.
Working in an unidentified infectious environment, with usually only conditional pathogens, working in a repellent environment:
9. Investigation and treatment including the collection and processing of biological material in patients treated for infectious complications following immunosuppressive treatment of both bacterial and viral origin or with infectious complications of cancer of both bacterial and viral origin.
10. Investigation and treatment including the collection and processing of biological material in patients in intensive care units, coronary units, resuscitation departments and equivalent bed facilities.
11. Treatment and investigation, including the collection and processing of biological material, usually in bed wards with heavy, immobile or long-term patients, such as patients who have had an accident, with severe burns, gerontopsychiatric patients, severe surgical, traumatic and orthopaedic cases, patients in long-term treatment, etc.
12. Handling of laundry before disinfecting it on all outpatient and berth facilities, where there is considerable contamination of laundry with infectious material, blood and other biological material.
13. Transport of infectious patients including disinfection of vehicles.
14. Treatment and investigation including collection and processing of biological material in patients with bacterial, fungal or parasitic skin diseases including handling of contaminated laundry.
15. Work in organisations or facilities where a higher degree supplement is usually provided, where there is no permanent (repeated) and direct contact with patients or biological material, but this contact cannot be excluded (e.g. maintenance, auxiliary and administrative work, removal of waste from these sites, cleaning, etc.).
16. Work in organisations or facilities where haemodialysis is performed, as well as selected work in post-operative rooms where there is no permanent (repeated) and direct contact with patients or biological material, but this contact cannot be excluded. (For example, complex maintenance of medical equipment, demineralisation stations, etc., work of diet nurses associated with preparing and handling of diet, including the predominance of food residues in patients with balance-sheet diets, consulting and psychological services including processing of written materials from hemodialysis departments, washing dishes and cleaning work at these workplaces, etc.
17. Surgery related work using extracurricular circulation including instrumentation and other auxiliary work in the operating room, e.g. in cardiothoracic surgery, vascular surgery, transplants etc.
18. Laboratory processing of biological materials from gastro-enterological centres, i.e. in particular blood, gastric and duodenal content, bile, pancreatic juices, stool and tissue biopsies including auxiliary, service and cleaning work on these sites.
19. Laboratory work associated with the identification of pathogenic micro-organisms or their toxins and work associated with the identification of endo - and ecoparasites in material which has been contaminated or suspected of contamination (e.g. verification of disinfectant and disinfectant methods, etc.).
20. Withdrawal of infectious material (e.g. to laboratories), including preparatory and auxiliary work related thereto as well as disinfection of means of transport.
21. Research and routine work including diagnostic work in non-microbiological investigations and analyses of chemical, biochemical, biophysical, haematological, toxicological, immunological, histological and other laboratories for the processing of biological material, where the risk of contamination of this material is pathogenic to micro-organisms and their toxins (e.g. work related to the treatment of blood of any provenance, tissues, cells, stools, pus, cerebrospinal fluid, punctates, secretions, excretes etc.).
22. Work associated with continuous blood and other biological materials.
23. Experimental and routine work with cell cultures, unless it is a work evaluated by a higher grade supplement.
24. Auxiliary and laboratory work on anatomical, pathological, anatomical and judicial medical workplaces and other similar workplaces where there is no regular (repeated) and direct contact with the bodies of the deceased.
25. Material samples from cadaverous donors.
26. Implementation and control of the implementation of disinfection, disassembly and extermination.
27. Working in a mechanical-biological sewage treatment plant.
28. Handling of solid waste in landfills and incinerators, cleaning and repair of waste containers (garbage cans, containers, fecal and ash trucks).
29. Selecting and cleaning of sinks, sludge sinks and fouling fields and other waste facilities, whether solid or liquid, including sampling of these materials for laboratory investigations.
30. Working with tissues and organs of laboratory animals which have not previously been deprived of the specific and non-specific pathogens they carry.
31. Investigation and treatment of large laboratory animals (dogs, monkeys, etc.) prior to inclusion in the experiment in quarantine departments, including collection of biological material and organs in the conduct of autopsies of these animals.
32. Digging and opening tombs and tombs, cleaning tombs.
33. Drinking biological material, manual handling of the intestines and digestive tract, handling of feathers and hair, preparation of animals.
34. Collection of dead animals.
B. IONITING AND ELECTROMAGNETIC LIGHT, WORKING WITH LASERS
Working with radioactive substances (preparations) and other sources of ionising radiation associated with low exposure risk and low likelihood of higher exposure in deviations from the operational status of the 1st categoris1 workplaces and working with impulse types of lasers.
1. Working with radionuclide preparations and open radiators not exceeding the activity permitted for Category I workplaces, e.g. activation quantitative analysis, use of radioisotopes in paper chromatography, control of sediment in water management, analysis of steel pollution in the metallurgical industry, including cleaning and maintenance of these workplaces and handling and treatment of waste on them.
2. Laundry and occupational clothing from workplaces with radioactive preparations and handling of this laundry before washing.
3. Transport of radioactive substances such as radioactive raw materials, radiopharmaceuticals, nuclear fuels in transport packages.
4. Working on radiodiagnostic tests limited to the use of remote-controlled devices without the presence of investigators in the exam room.
5. Structural, phase and spectral analysis of substances by ionizing radiation on diffraction meters, spectrometers etc.
6. Work with sources of ionising radiation in research and verification of new methods for measuring different types of ionising radiation and radioactive substances, as well as the identification and use of equipment for measuring ionising radiation and radioactive substances, in so far as these are not work evaluated by a higher grade supplement.
7. Output technical control of radioactivity and purity of radioactive substances.
8. Working on equipment in an ionising radiation environment, e.g. maintenance of machinery, electro and small building maintenance, cleaning, glass washing after analyses of radioactive radiators.
9. Basic and applied research, development and other work in the management, operation and maintenance of gamma radiation sources and corpuscular radiation, e.g. zero power reactors, charged particle accelerators etc.
10. Rengenoscopy for evaluation of the test subject or material by visual observation, e.g. for testing of light metals alloys, plastic materials, thin-wall steel products etc.
11. Working on supervision, control and measurement by control officers at low-exposure workplaces (outside controlled zones) at workplaces where a surcharge is granted to other workers under this Regulation in Group I.
12. The activity of supervisors at workplaces using low-risk sources of ionising radiation at workplaces where a surcharge is granted to other workers under this Regulation in Group I.
13. Testing of defects in material, equipment, semi-finished products and products without violating integrity (non-destructive tests) in fixed workplaces using closed radioactive radiators (gamma-radiation defects) or X-ray devices with remote control.
14. Working with Class IIIa lasers) and lower, used for surgical operations.
15. Working in the supervision, control and measurement of Class IIIa lasers) and lower.
16. Working in the supervision, control and measurement of electromagnetic radiation with high and very high frequency.
17. Experimental work in studying the biological effects of electromagnetic radiation with a high and very high frequency.
18. Research and development work in image and reproductive technology in the adjustment, testing and repair of prototypes and functional screen patterns, which is the source of ionizing radiation.
19. Operation of X-ray in the laboratory in microstructure and X-ray motor phase analyses of materials, metals, ceramics and other objects.
20. Working at the preservation irradiation workplace in sterilisation and disassembly of collection items.
21. Work with simulator in radiotherapy planning.
22. Working with sources of radiation and closed radiators in the treatment of internal, internal and surface application of radiators, including the preparation of radiators and the operation of patients using automatic after-treatment systems.
C. CHEMICAL CARCINOGENES
1. Works in chemical, physico-chemical and biochemical laboratories in which, in the research process, in particular chemical synthesis, substances with serious late organ action (e.g. aflatoxins, acrylonitrile, diazomethane, 1,2- dibromoethane, 3,3-dichlorobenzidine, dimethylsulphate, epichlorhydrin, ethylene oxide, phenilhydrazine, methyl iodide, 4- nitrobiphenyl, N- nitrosodimethylamine, polychromed biphenyls, β-propiolactone, tetrachloromethane, cytostatics and all substances, mixtures or products containing more than 1% of these substances; and benzene).
2. Analysing carcinogens and mutagens (substances with genotoxic effect) and testing the genotoxic effect of these substances.
3. Testing of mutagenic effects of chemicals including investigations such as peripheral lymphocytes in workers at risk of such substances.
4. Service gas sterilisers (ethylene oxide, formaldehyde).
5. Routine and research work associated with the preparation and application of cytostatics in workplaces where chemotherapy is an exceptional medical discipline. This concerns both the preparation (dilution) of cytotoxic agents and the treatment of patients treated with cytotoxic agents and the handling of laundry and excretion of these patients, which are contaminated by biodegradation or activated bioproducts of cytostatic therapy.
6. Laboratory work associated with the synthesis and development of cytostatics and mutagenic agents.
D. OTHER CHEMICAL SCHEDULES
Work which may exceptionally be a source of disease, health damage or cause an occupational disease in which workers are:
- proven to be at risk from specific chemical or physical factors of the working environment, generally below (above) levels for which work is difficult, declared risky.
1. Collection and processing of material for biological exposure tests.
2. Sampling of working air and biological material at workplaces with subsequent processing of samples to establish a correlation between measured values in working air and biological material.
3. Monitoring at workplaces, health monitoring and sampling with subsequent treatment of air samples in laboratories, in particular for the determination of chemical compounds and dustiness and their effect on health.
4. Supervision of work carried out at workplaces with chemical pollutants and dustiness, if these work are categorised as Category 2 and higher within the meaning of the Methodological Instructions of the Ministry of Health of the Czech Socialist Republic No 9 / 1987 Bulletin of the Ministry of Health of the Czech Socialist Republic on carrying out hygienic supervision at workplaces and declaring risky work.
5. Work associated with inhalation experiments in gas chambers, including the collection of biological material and air samples and the examination of the health status of persons, to determine the relationship between concentrations of substances in air, their metabolites in biological material and health.
6. Dust preparation for testing fibrogenic activity.
7. Anesthesiological teams work to provide general anaesthesia in anaesthesia with gaseous anaesthetics or liquid anaesthetics (e.g. halotane, ether, nitrous oxide, cyclopropane) and other work on anaesthesiology-resuscitation departments in the provision of anaesthesia and patient treatment.
8. Working in a toxicological, chemical, physico-chemical and biochemical or other test laboratory in qualitative and quantitative analyses, including the preparation of samples for analysis, provided that the substance analysed is particularly dangerous to humans and that it requires high expertise and observance of demanding preventive measures including the use of restrictive personal protective equipment (e.g. chemical analyses of such compounds in drug control laboratories, chemical analyses of substances of unknown composition that can reasonably be expected to have the characteristics of such compounds, chemical analysis of cytotoxics, snakes, hormones, antibiotics, live vaccines, etc.).
9. Testing of toxicity of substances with unknown effects in laboratory animals, including treatment of these animals and analytical-chemical, biochemical, toxicological and histological treatment of material from them.
10. Work connected with direct contact with unhardened resins, the formation of heavy metals dust and silica dust during blast cleaning.
11. Laminating according to plaster or wooden model.
12. Mixing of phenoplastic resins and their manual application to glass yarn.
13. Working in semi-operational conditions for both basic and applied research and development, production, processing and treatment, manual handling of storage, division and packaging of substances where the raw material, semi-finished or finished product is poisonous, work in these conditions is associated with the risk of subacute and sub-chronic poisoning mainly by inhalation of both solid and liquid aerosol and gas or by percutaneous (intact skin).
14. Mining research work in a test pit, in an environment artificially designed to test the hazardous effects of mining air components for workers, etc.
15. The work of basic research on coal, minerals (sandstone, marble, siderite) in high intensity magnetic field, ultrasound (acoustic field) and high frequency field in laboratory and semi-operational conditions.
16. Research work on desulphurisation and removal of arsenic and beryllium by leaching the iron sulphate solution with the addition of bacteria, under semi-operating conditions subsurface coal extraction.
17. Research work on coal briquing - dry treatment of coal by milling, sorting, drying and briquing on presses with possible binders (coal pitch, tar and oil residues) in semi-operational and operational conditions.
18. Research work in laboratory conditions in the preparation and processing of monocrystals, cleaning, mixing, crystal cultivation, etc. from toxic mercury compounds, vismuth, thallium, cadmium, arsenic and selenium.
19. Preparation and working of the monocrystal of galiumarsenide and galiumphosphide, growing of volume monocrystals from high temperature solutions at normal and high pressure up to 20 MPa with a risk of white phosphorus and various gaseous mixtures.
20. Research and operation of laboratory plasmatrons in ultraviolet and ionising radiation from ionized plasma at a temperature of about 15,000 K, nitrous gases, ozone and excessive noise from supersonic gas flow.
21. Working with liquid alkali metals in semi-provocation in the performance of experimental equipment, distillation and filtration and maintenance of equipment including sampling.
22. Working with different types of pesticides in dusting and spraying while studying their effects on the biological activity of the organism at higher doses than commercial use.
23. Spray and powder with substances classified as poisons to protect against pests, weeds, soil disinfection, seed treatment and seedlings with such substances.
24. Working in the maintenance and repair of live road surfaces.
Direct contact with inhalation allergens:
25. Preparation of general, pollen, bacterial, fungal, or other allergens and work associated with inhalation experiments in gas chambers, especially when performing provocation inhalation tests.
Other chemical effects:
26. Processing of colour photos and colour inverse films.
27. Preservative works of collection objects by chemical means with specific serious late effects (pentachlorophenol).
28. Mechanical working of lead products and alloys (over 75% Pb).
29. Insulation work (preparation of putty, ceramic tiles, tiles and linings including pairing and spawn) with acid-resistant mastics based on synthetic resins.
30. Spray with two-component epoxy varnishes, nitrolacs and synthetic emails in the syringe box and in enclosed areas.
31. Cleaning of production equipment, tanks, tanks, tanks and tanks if the employee works inside.
32. Welding by electric arc of steel and colour metals in welding plants.
33. Electrical arc welding in a protective atmosphere (argon, carbon dioxide).
34. Welding of aluminium and its alloys with argonarc and arcanon.
35. Working with hot asphalt materials such as manual application, straightening and processing of coated crushing, sealing of pipes.
36. Work in research, production, use and storage of particularly dangerous and other poisons and their derivatives and work associated with the production of demarine and desiccitation mixtures containing pollutants.
E. PHYSICAL INVESTMENTS
1. Noise work exceeding N 115.
2. Working with drilling hammers, drilling sets, paddles, rivets, vibrating paws, hand pads and other vibration devices.
3. Cutting, securing and processing of wood by sawing with an internal combustion engine.
4. The machining of hard material tooth replacements associated with a large press and pressure of one hand on the tools and with a counterpressure of the other hand holding a hard-working replacement, not exceeding 20% of the working shift, to which further work associated with the overloading of the upper limbs is carried out so that the total working time associated with the overloading of the small muscle groups of the hand does not exceed 50% of the working time.
5. Handling with dust and dust in boiler rooms, heat plants and hot combustion plants.
6. Worked by hand or machine in dry, cutting, grinding and polishing of hard stones.
7. Cleaning of channels, grates and dust traps in air conditioning equipment.
8. Work with respirators or filter masks.
9. Works performed at heights above 10 m on secured workplaces (scaffolding, forklifts, etc.).
10. Sand blasting in blast machines with operating outside the blast area.
11. Preparation of foundry forming sands in the foundry environment (mixing, drying, sifting), manual forging.
12. Crushing of chamotte and quartz materials on jaw crushers or in ball mills.
13. Grinding with sand discs in dry conditions.
14. Moving the means of chemical protection of the individual.
15. Interrupting castings from sand moulds to pendulum or stand grinders in a ciderian environment.
Group II
A. PROFESSIONAL INFERENCE
Working at the risk of precisely defined infections:
Working in an environment at the risk of a professional infectious disease, which is classified as medium-severe, severe to very severe, often with lasting health consequences and permanent disability, generally requiring demanding professional competence with high standards of strict compliance with hygiene and anti-epidemic principles. It is mainly a disease:
- aerobic clostridium,
- anthrax,
- brucellosis,
- abdominal typhoid,
- CM virus,
- EB virus,
- entamebou dysenteriae,
- cholera,
- LCMV (Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus),
- Legionnaire disease,
- legionelli,
- lepru,
- human retrovirals including HIV,
- plague,
- multi-resistant infections,
- mycoplasmates,
- oncogenic human DNA viruses, RNA,
- monkeys and human herpes viruses,
- organ mycoses,
- ornitosou,
- pasterelose,
- slow viral infections,
- receiving,
- psitakosou,
- Q fever,
- retrovirals,
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Regulation Information
| Citation | Decree of the Government of the Czech Republic No. 252 / 1992 Coll., on the conditions for granting and the amount of the special surcharge for carrying out activities in difficult and healthy working conditions |
|---|---|
| Regulation Type | - |
| Author | - |
| Collection | Code of Laws |
| Date of Promulgation | 12.06.1992 |
|---|---|
| Effective from | 12.06.1992 |
| Effective until | - |
| Status | Valid |
The regulation text is for informational purposes only.
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