Decree No. 75 / 1967 Coll.

Decree of the Ministry of Health and Foreign Affairs on additional leave for workers who are working harmful or particularly difficult to work and on compensation for loss of earnings after the cessation of incapacity for certain occupational diseases

Valid Effective from 20.07.1967
75
DECLARATION
Ministry of Health and Foreign Affairs
of 20 June 1967
on additional leave for workers who work harmful or particularly difficult to work and on compensation for loss of earnings after leaving work for certain occupational diseases
The Ministry of Health and Foreign Affairs shall, in agreement with the Ministry of Foreign Trade, the Central Council of Trade and the other participating central bodies, provide for further measures for the implementation of the Labour Code No 65 / 1965 Coll., pursuant to § 13 (2) of Decree No. 66 / 1965 Coll., implementing the Labour Code and the Government Resolution of 1 February 1967 on further measures for the implementation of the Labour Code:

Část I

Additional leave for workers doing work harmful or particularly difficult
§ 1
Harmful or particularly difficult workers shall be considered to be:
(a) workers who carry out work or work in the workplaces (in the areas) referred to in Sections 2 to 5 of this Decree,
(b) divers working under increased pressure in suits and workers (kessonars) performing kesonation work in compressed air in chambers of work.
§ 2
Work in tuberculosis hospitals, tuberculosis sleeper and outpatient departments of national health institutions in which patients with contagious tuberculosis are treated, and in Banga isolates are:
1. work in which workers come into permanent direct contact with ill tuberculosis or infectious material from these patients
(a) treatment of tuberculosis and respiratory diseases;
(b) in the departments (clinics) of tuberculosis and respiratory diseases of hospitals with a clinic, clinics and other outpatient and berth medical facilities intended for the investigation and treatment of patients with tuberculosis;
(c) in shops and establishments of services located directly in tbc hospitals and facilities;
2. Work in the bangosa stables, which have been declared a bangous isolates.
§ 3
Work in which workers are exposed to significant adverse effects on ionising radiation is:
1. work in the environment of open radiators
(a) in category II and III workplaces according to ČSN 341730,
(b) for the application of open radiators to humans and animals and for the treatment of people and animals with open radiators;
(c) for the extraction, sorting, treatment and processing of radioactive materials and for the search and exploration of radioactive material deposits, as defined in more detail by the Central Administration of the uranium industry;
(d) for the disposal and treatment of radioactive waste, for decontamination and for the washing of active laundry;
(e) when pumping radio emanation and preparing radon baths and inhalations;
2. any work on nuclear reactors and their technological circuits when workers are working with radioactive media and handling fuel cells;
3. work on rtg devices (except for workers who work exclusively in stable skiagings and technical rtg equipment, whose shielding corresponds to shielding rooms for workers who are not professionally exposed to ionizing radiation, for example for stable rtg skiascopies, for stable rtg defects and so on), in particular:
(a) the auxiliary work of health professionals in the holding of sick (for example children or adults unable to move independently) and of workers in the holding facilities of veterinary services in the case of rtg examinations where fixation equipment and such work with rtg devices cannot be used in veterinary service facilities which cannot be carried out in special rooms for this purpose;
(b) research work (even auxiliary) on prototypes of electron beam instruments with an energy of 50 KvV and more (but not the operation of an electron microscope),
c) working with mobile technical rtg devices for defectoscopy;
and work if performed on a monthly average of at least 3 hours a day, in particular
(d) work on medical diagnostic and therapeutic rtg devices, except those which can be performed exclusively from service stations whose shielding corresponds to shielding rooms for workers who are not professionally exposed to ionizing radiation;
(e) work in rtg structural and phase analysis if remote operation from protected areas is not possible for the duration of the radiation,
(f) working in the manufacture of X-rays and in the assembly, testing and maintenance of X-rays and X-ray sets in which workers are exposed to rtg radiation and which cannot be conducted from protected areas, the shielding of which corresponds to the shielding of rooms for workers who are not professionally exposed to ionising radiation;
4. work with closed lamps or neutron sources, or with particle accelerators (except for workers who work exclusively in remote control stations whose shielding corresponds to shielding rooms for workers who are not professionally exposed to ionising radiation), in particular:
(a) for the application of closed fluorescent lamps to humans and animals, and for the treatment of humans and animals with closed-off radiophores and for the preparation of radiophones for application;
(b) in the case of mobile gamma-defectoscopy,
(c) in the case of carotage by closed radiators (gamma and neutron carotage),
(d) with particle accelerators (for example, with cascade accelerator, with cyclotron, with Van de Graaf accelerator, with beta-trons and beta-tron accelerators);
5. work carried out
(a) staff of the Department of Transport and the Ministry of National Defence, the Department of Ionizing Radiation of the Research Institute of Labour and Occupational Diseases in Bratislava and dedicated staff of the Institute of Labour Hygiene in the Uranium Industry and the Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene in Prague,
(b) when supervised in workplaces with sources of ionising radiation by other specialised personnel, such as the Plant Institute of National Health of the Uranium Industry and technical staff of the State Mining Administration when supervised in the workplaces for the exploration, extraction and treatment of radioactive raw materials;
6. works carried out in the Institute of Nuclear Research and in the Institute for Research, Production and Use of Radioisotopes, with a risk of ionising radiation comparable to those referred to in points 1 to 5; these works detail the management of these institutes.
§ 4
Work at workplaces with infectious materials in which workers are exposed to a direct risk of infection is:
1. for the processing of material containing or suspected of the presence of pathogens and other material in an infectious environment
(a) laboratories with highly virulent material;
(b) in microbiological laboratories where material containing or suspected of the presence of pathogens is processed;
(c) in the laboratory departments of hospitals where biochemical and hematologic investigations of materials from the infectious ward are carried out as a regular part of the workload;
2. in the preparation of antigens and vaccines in laboratories and facilities where microbial antigens and vaccines are produced;
3. in the investigation, treatment, treatment, transport and provision of other special needs of patients with infectious diseases or carriers of infectious germs in direct contact with them or with infectious material from them
(a) in the infectious departments of hospitals, clinics or other health establishments and scientific, research, teaching and control institutes, including transport services for infectious diseases;
(b) the infectious parts of other departments of such establishments, where the sick are treated with sexual diseases or trachoma and where the carriers of germ diseases are concentrated;
(c) those parts of the ward for chronically ill social care institutions where carriers of germ diseases are concentrated;
4. in the case of autopsies and the processing of autopsy and biopic material in the pathological and anatomical departments, in the judicial medical departments, in the chemical laboratories of these establishments and in the veterinary pathology and judicial departments;
5. in carrying out epidemiological and epidemiological investigations, the staff of the anti-epidemiological and disinfectant departments of sanitary stations and similar veterinary and sanitary services of the Ministry of Transport, the Ministry of National Defence and the Ministry of Interior;
6. in the treatment of infected experimental animals and production animals used in the manufacture of vaccines and in other operations with such animals, if they are infected with diseases communicable to humans, and in the handling of materials from such animals containing or suspected of being present at all workplaces where such work takes place;
7. in carrying out focal disinfectant, disinsection and deratization, including the collection of dead animals at all sites where disinfection, disinsection and deratization are carried out in an outbreak;
8. Treatment, treatment and other handling of animals immunised, infected or suspected of being infected with the following diseases communicable to humans:
glanders, rabies, tularaemia, ornitosis, psittacosis, toxoplasmosis, listeriosis, smoked, salmonella, foot-and-mouth disease, red, streptococcal disease, tuberculosis, brucellosis and trichophycia
(a) in the facilities of the veterinary service where these animals are treated;
(b) in isolation and quarantine facilities for animals sick or suspected of being infected with diseases communicable to humans, in sanitary slaughterhouses or in sanitary departments of slaughterhouses, including stables of sanitary slaughterhouses, and including slaughterhouses declared temporarily to be an ambulance veterinary service and stables infested with tuberculosis;
(c) on the lines of the poultry industry where the slaughter or suspected slaughter of poultry with ornitosis is carried out;
(d) in the collection of dead animals and confiscates, in the capillaries and in the collection and collection of dead animals and confiscates,
(e) in forced cutting if it processes infectious raw materials,
(f) in slaughterhouses when the intestines are eviscerated in the butchery profession;
9. In the handling of plant or animal material subject to quarantine measures in relation to the fight against communicable diseases in the storage of material subject to quarantine measures;
10. the disposal of materials containing pathogens, the washing of contaminated dishes, glass, tools and tools, the servicing of waste water treatment plants and waste incineration plants and the cleaning, maintenance and repair work at the workplaces referred to in points 1 to 9;
11. in the handling of movement certificates, health certificates and autopsy reports or other documents which have come into direct contact with the infectious material or come from an infectious environment at the workplace referred to in points 1 to 5;
12. in the cleaning of sewers, sludge areas, sewage waste, cesspool, input, sewerage and connections, the destruction of harmful animals in sewers and the servicing of sewage treatment plants at all sites where workers come into direct contact with biological waste water and waste;
13. when handling the infectious laundry, clothing and protective equipment from the establishments referred to in point 3 until they are disinfected.
§ 5
Tropical or otherwise difficult areas are:
Aden
Afghanistan
Algiers
Angola
Argentina
Basut
Bechuan
Bolivia
Burma
Burundi
Ceylon
Chad
China
Dahome
Ecuador
Ethiopia
Filipines
Gabun
Gambia
Ghana
Guatemala
Guyana
Guinea
Honduras
Hong Kong
Upper Volta
Chile up to 30 degrees south latitude
India
Indonesia
Iraq
Iran
Israel
Yemen
South West Africa
Jordan
Cambodia
Cameroon
Caribbean
Kenya
Colombia
Congo-Kinshasa
Congo-Brazzaville
Korea
Costa Rica
Cuba
Kuwait
Lebanon
Laos
Liberia
Libya
Malaysia
Republic of Malgaše
Malawi
Mali
Morocco
Mauritania
Mexico
Mongolian People's Republic
Mozambique
Nepal
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Panama
Papua
Pakistan
Paraguay
Gulf of Persian
Peru
Côte d'Ivoire
Portugal
Rhodesia
Rwanda
El Salvador
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
North New Guinea
Sierra Leone
Singapore
United Arab Republic
Somalia
Central African Republic
Sudan
Swaziland
Syrian Arab Republic
Tanzania
Thailand
Togo
Tunisia
Part of Turkey-Asia
Uganda
Uruguay
Venezuela
Vietnam
Zambia
§ 6
Workers who work on the work or workplaces referred to in this Decree shall be entitled to additional leave in respect of the work referred to in Sections 2 and 4, provided that they carry out such work at least half of the working hours prescribed for such work or at such workplaces.

Část III

Final provision
§ 9
This decree shall take effect on the day of its publication.
Minister for Foreign Affairs:
Dr. Poodles v. r.
Minister for Health:
Dr Plojhar v. r.

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Regulation Information

CitationDecree of the Ministry of Health and Foreign Affairs No. 75 / 1967 Coll., on additional leave for workers who are working harmful or particularly difficult to work and on compensation for loss of earnings after disability for certain occupational diseases
Regulation Type-
Author-
CollectionCode of Laws
Date of Promulgation20.07.1967
Effective from20.07.1967
Effective until-
Status Valid
The regulation text is for informational purposes only.
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