Panama
Organization responsible for the statistics
Collection and compilation:
Caja de Seguro Social
(Social Insurance Fund)
.
Publication:
Departamento Nacional de Estadísticas (National Statistics
Department)
.
Periodicity
Compilation:
Quarterly, semi-anual and annual.
Publication:
Annual.
Source
Occupational Safety Department, National Statistics Department,
Social Insurance Fund.
Objectives and users
To offer users updated, summarized information on the most
relevant aspects of the country's demographic, economic and
social statistics.
Major users:
General Comptroller, Occupational Health Section of the Social Insurance
Fund and university students.
Coverage
Persons:
All paid employees, including apprentices. Workers engaged in
domestic service, self-employed workers and labourers in
non-mechanized agriculture, cattle-raising and forestry may
participate in a voluntary insurance scheme.
In 1996, 654,936 workers were covered.
Economic activities:
All economic activities and sectors.
Geographic areas:
The whole country.
The statistics include nationals working
abroad and persons normally residing outside the country.
Establishments:
All types and sizes of establishments.
Types of occupational accidents covered
Reported occupational injuries that provide entitlement to compensation
as well as those reported to or detected by another system.
All
types of occupational accidents and commuting accidents.
Statistics on occupational diseases are compiled and published
separately.
Concepts and definitions
(Source: Current legislation on occupational risks, Social
Insurance Fund)
Occupational accident:
Any bodily injury or functional disturbance arising out of or
in the course of work that is sustained by a worker and produced
by the sudden or violent action of an external cause or resulting
from an effort made by the worker. Occupational accidents shall
also be understood to mean those sustained by a worker:
- engaged in carrying out an employer's orders or in providing
a service under the employer's authority, even if outside the
workplace and not during working hours;
- before, during, or after breaks, if, in keeping with his
duties,the worker is present at the workplace or on the premises
of the enterprise, establishment or installation;
- as a consequence of the actions of a third party, which is
understood to mean persons other than the employer, or the
employer's representatives or workers;
- as a consequence of an intentional act on the part of the
employer or a fellow worker while performing work.
Occupational accidents shall be understood not to include:
- those caused intentionally by the worker;
- those caused through gross negligence on the part of the
victim, such as proven disobedience of express orders, the
deliberate failure to comply with the provisions of the Rules for
the Prevention of Occupational Risk, and any form of narcosis, or
drunkenness, unless the employer or the employer's
representatives authorized the worker to perform his duties. In
such cases, the employer is considered to be indirectly
responsible for the accident, and the Social Insurance Fund may
apply the appropriate sanctions for negligence.
Occupational risks:
occupational risks shall be understood to mean accidents
sustained by the public- or private-sector employee, provided
that:
- the employee was carrying out the employer's orders or
providing a service with the employer's permission, including
outside the workplace or not during working hours;
- the accident is sustained at the workplace, before or after
working hours, or at the workplace in keeping with the worker's
duties;
- these are attributable to persons unrelated to the employee's
work, or to an intentional act on the part of the employer or a
fellow worker while performing work;
- the employee is travelling from his residence to the
workplace or vice versa. In order for the journey to be covered,
it cannot have been deviated from, interrupted or lengthened for
personal reasons.
Occupational injury:
any pathological state arising as a consequence of the work
process or owing to the specific conditions in which the work is
performed. The term shall also be understood to include any
injury, functional disturbance or complication sustained by the
worker after the accident or the classification of the
occupational disease, and resulting from them.
Commuting accident:
an accident occurring en route between the workplace and:
- the worker's primary or secondary residence;
- the place where the worker usually takes his/her meals;
- the place where the worker usually collects his/her pay.
Loss of working time:
when a worker is incapable of performing his/her usual duties.
Fatal occupational injury:
injuries that cause the worker's death and are attributable to
or result from work.
Temporary incapacity to work:
such incapacity as results from an occupational accident or
disease which renders a worker temporarily incapable of
performing work, and consequently, of earning wages, provided
that permanent incapacity has not been declared.
Permanent incapacity to work:
- Permanent partial incapacity: such incapacity as results
from incurable disturbances or those of an unpredictable
duration, which reduce the insured person's capacity for work,
but do not cause permanent total incapacity.
- Permanent total incapacity: such incapacity as results from
incurable organic or functional disturbances, or those of an
unpredictable duration, which prevent the insured person from
carrying out any type of paid employment.
Minimum period of absence from work:
none.
Maximum period for death to be considered a fatal occupational injury:
none.
Types of information compiled
(a) personal characteristics of persons injured:
sex, age;
(b) amount of worktime lost:
not applicable;
(c) characteristics of accidents:
date, time and place of the accident;
(d) characteristics of injuries:
these were initially compiled, but due to the modernization plan,
compilation has been temporarily suspended;
(e) characteristics of employers or workplaces:
geographical location.
Measurement of worktime lost
Not applicable.
Classifications
(a) fatal or non-fatal accidents;
(b) extent of disability:
these were initially compiled but, due to the modernization plan,
compilation has been temporarily suspended;
(c) economic activity;
(d) occupation:
these were initially compiled, but due to the modernization plan,
compilation has been temporarily suspended;
(e) type of injury:
these were initially compiled, but due to the modernization plan,
compilation has been temporarily suspended;
(f) cause of accident:
these were initially compiled, but due to the modernization plan,
compilation has been temporarily suspended;
(g) duration of absence from work:
not applicable;
(h) characteristics of workers:
not applicable;
(i) characteristics of accidents:
not applicable;
(j) characteristics of employers or workplaces:
not applicable.
Crossclassifications:
- day, period and time;
- economic activity and sex;
- sex and age;
- economic activity, province and district.
Reference period
Three months, six months, and one year.
An occupational injury is recorded in the
period in which the accident ocurred, in the period in
which the accident report or the compensation claim in relation
to the accident was submitted to the competent authority, and in
the period in which compensation payments were initiated.
Worktime lost as a result of injury is registered in the
period in which the accident occurred.
Estimates
Totals.
Percentage distributions by economic activity and sex.
Rates are not calculated.
Historical background of the series
The statistics were first compiled in July 1970.
The initial objective of the compilation was to collect all
statistical information concerning occupational risk coverage at
the Social Insurance Fund.
There have not been any changes.
Documentation
Series available:
The following tables are published:
Funeral subsidy, by enterprise economic activity.
Occupational disease subsidy, by economic activity.
Commuting accident subsidy, by economic activity.
Incapacity subsidy, by province.
Temporary incapacity subsidy, by:
Bibliographic references:
The data are published in:
Contaloría General de la República:
Panamá en Cifras
(annual).
idem: Boletín Histórico de la Seguridad
Social
(annual).
Methodological notes for the statistics are not published.
All data are not published, but they are furnished to the
Ministry of Planning, the Ministry of Labour and to university
students.
The data are also available on diskette.
Data published by ILO:
The following data are furnished regularly to the ILO for
publication in the Yearbook of Labour Statistics
, relating to
compensated injuries (including commuting accidents) and classified
according to major division of economic activity: number of persons
fatally injured, number of persons injured with lost worktime, total of
these two groups; rates of fatal injuries. The number of persons at risk
(total
number of employees) is also supplied and stored in the LABORSTA
database.
Confidentiality:
There are no restrictions on the publication of the data on
occupational injuries.
International standards
Not available.
Method of data collection
Legislation:
The compensation scheme covers occupational injuries and diseases
resulting from occupational accidents and diseases. There is a
time limit for the compensation claim to be submitted.
Reporting:
Information path: from the injured person to the Social
Insurance Fund. The Medical Commission determines the percentage
of compensation to be paid. There are official forms for filing
compensation claims and instructions and guidelines on the
compensation scheme.
Data reported:
- information about the injured worker;
- information about employers or workplaces;
- information about the occupational accident, incident or
exposure to risk factors;
- information about the occupational injury or disease.
Changes planned:
There are plans to change the compensation scheme in the next few
years.
Additional information
Notification system
Pursuant to Cabinet Decree No. 68 of 31 March 1970,
compulsory coverage of occupational risks is centralized within
the Social Insurance Fund. The employer, or the employer's
representative within the enterprise management, is required to
give notice to the Social Insurance Fund within a maximum period
of 48 hours following any occurrence within the enterprise that
may constitute an occupational risk. In the case of a commuting
accident, the report must be prsented within a maximum of 24
hours. Official forms for reporting occupational injuries and
diseases are available, as well as instructions and guidelines
for notification. Information reported includes: the worker,
the employer or the workplace, the occupational accident, the
exposure to risk factors and the occupational injury or disease.