PSYCHOSOCIAL RISKS IN INFORMAL WORKERS IN THE AGROINDUSTRIAL SECTOR IN THE MUNICIPALITY OF SANTO TOMÁS (COLOMBIAN CARIBBEAN)

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/k7ex4416

Palabras clave:

Agrarian economy, Job security, Work environment, Quality Of Work Life , Mental Health

Resumen

Fasecolda assures that there are currently 16 companies in the municipality of Santo Tomas belonging to the agriculture, livestock, hunting, forestry and fishing sector; Similarly, Fasecolda does not have records of work accidents, work-related illnesses or deaths in the last five years in the municipality's agro-industrial sector, so we can deduce that there are many informal workers working in this sector, therefore, since it is not are affiliated with the general occupational risk system, it is not possible to evidence ATEL reports in the occupational risk administrators. Therefore, the general objective of this article is to determine the psychosocial risks in workers in the agroindustrial sector of the municipality of Santo Tomas/Atlántico in the period 2023, through a quantitative, descriptive approach methodology. cross-sectional design, field study with primary source, where the Psychosocial Risk Assessment Questionnaire at Work instrument was applied to a representative sample of 60 informal workers from the agroindustrial sector of Santo Tomas, Atlántico, and is given as the main conclusion that the qualification of informal workers in the agroindustrial sector of Santo Tomas, Atlántico in the dimension Psychological demands, the risk is medium; In the dimension Active work and possibility of development, the risk is medium; in the dimension Social support in business the risk is high; in the Company Compensation dimension the risk is medium; and in the Double presence in company dimension the risk is medium.

Publicado

2024-06-06

Cómo citar

PSYCHOSOCIAL RISKS IN INFORMAL WORKERS IN THE AGROINDUSTRIAL SECTOR IN THE MUNICIPALITY OF SANTO TOMÁS (COLOMBIAN CARIBBEAN). (2024). CARIBBEAN JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS ISSN: 3028-3884 (En línea), 3(1), 1-19. https://doi.org/10.5281/k7ex4416