Regulation 4.1 – Medical care on board
ship and ashore
Purpose: To protect the health of seafarers and ensure their
prompt access to medical care on board ship and ashore
1 Each Member shall ensure that all seafarers
on ships that fly its flag are covered by adequate measures for the
protection of their health and that they have access to prompt and
adequate medical care whilst working on board.
2 The protection and care under paragraph 1 of
this Regulation shall, in principle, be provided at no cost to the
seafarers.
3 Each Member shall ensure that seafarers on board
ships in its territory who are in need of immediate medical care are
given access to the Member’s medical facilities on shore.
4 The requirements for on-board health protection
and medical care set out in the Code include standards for measures
aimed at providing seafarers with health protection and medical care
as comparable as possible to that which is generally available to
workers ashore.
Standard A4.1 – Medical care on board ship and ashore
1 Each Member shall ensure that measures providing
for health protection and medical care, including essential dental
care, for seafarers working on board a ship that flies its flag are
adopted which:
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(a) ensure the application to seafarers of any
general provisions on occupational health protection and medical care
relevant to their duties, as well as of special provisions specific
to work on board ship;
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(b) ensure that seafarers are given health protection
and medical care as comparable as possible to that which is generally
available to workers ashore, including prompt access to the necessary
medicines, medical equipment and facilities for diagnosis and treatment
and to medical information and expertise;
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(c) give seafarers the right to visit a qualified
medical doctor or dentist without delay in ports of call, where practicable;
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(d) ensure that, to the extent consistent with
the Member’s national law and practice, medical care and health
protection services while a seafarer is on board ship or landed in
a foreign port are provided free of charge to seafarers; and
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(e) are not limited to treatment of sick or injured
seafarers but include measures of a preventive character such as health
promotion and health education programmes.
2 The competent authority shall adopt a standard
medical report form for use by the ships’ masters and relevant
onshore and on-board medical personnel. The form, when completed,
and its contents shall be kept confidential and shall only be used
to facilitate the treatment of seafarers.
3 Each Member shall adopt laws and regulations
establishing requirements for on-board hospital and medical care facilities
and equipment and training on ships that fly its flag.
4 National laws and regulations shall as a minimum
provide for the following requirements:
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(a) all ships shall carry a medicine chest, medical
equipment and a medical guide, the specifics of which shall be prescribed
and subject to regular inspection by the competent authority; the
national requirements shall take into account the type of ship, the
number of persons on board and the nature, destination and duration
of voyages and relevant national and international recommended medical
standards;
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(b) ships carrying 100 or more persons and ordinarily
engaged on international voyages of more than three days’ duration
shall carry a qualified medical doctor who is responsible for providing
medical care; national laws or regulations shall also specify which
other ships shall be required to carry a medical doctor, taking into
account, inter alia, such factors as the duration, nature and conditions
of the voyage and the number of seafarers on board;
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(c) ships which do not carry a medical doctor
shall be required to have either at least one seafarer on board who
is in charge of medical care and administering medicine as part of
their regular duties or at least one seafarer on board competent to
provide medical first aid; persons in charge of medical care on board
who are not medical doctors shall have satisfactorily completed training
in medical care that meets the requirements of the International Convention
on Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping for Seafarers,
1978, as amended (“STCW”); seafarers designated to provide
medical first aid shall have satisfactorily completed training in
medical first aid that meets the requirements of STCW; national laws
or regulations shall specify the level of approved training required
taking into account, inter alia, such factors as the duration, nature
and conditions of the voyage and the number of seafarers on board;
and
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(d) the competent authority shall ensure by a
prearranged system that medical advice by radio or satellite communication
to ships at sea, including specialist advice, is available 24 hours
a day; medical advice, including the onward transmission of medical
messages by radio or satellite communication between a ship and those
ashore giving the advice, shall be available free of charge to all
ships irrespective of the flag that they fly.
Guideline B4.1 – Medical care on board ship and ashore
Guideline B4.1.1 – Provision of medical care
1 When determining the level of medical training
to be provided on board ships that are not required to carry a medical
doctor, the competent authority should require that:
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(a) ships which ordinarily are capable of reaching
qualified medical care and medical facilities within eight hours should
have at least one designated seafarer with the approved medical first-aid
training required by STCW which will enable such persons to take immediate,
effective action in case of accidents or illnesses likely to occur
on board a ship and to make use of medical advice by radio or satellite
communication; and
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(b) all other ships should have at least one designated
seafarer with approved training in medical care required by STCW,
including practical training and training in life-saving techniques
such as intravenous therapy, which will enable the persons concerned
to participate effectively in coordinated schemes for medical assistance
to ships at sea, and to provide the sick or injured with a satisfactory
standard of medical care during the period they are likely to remain
on board.
2 The training referred to in paragraph 1 of this
Guideline should be based on the contents of the most recent editions
of the International Medical Guide for Ships, the Medical
First Aid Guide for Use in Accidents Involving Dangerous Goods,
the Document for Guidance – An International Maritime
Training Guide, and the medical section of the International
Code of Signals as well as similar national guides.
3 Persons referred to in paragraph 1 of this Guideline
and such other seafarers as may be required by the competent authority
should undergo, at approximately five-year intervals, refresher courses
to enable them to maintain and increase their knowledge and skills
and to keep up-to-date with new developments.
4 The medicine chest and its contents, as well
as the medical equipment and medical guide carried on board, should
be properly maintained and inspected at regular intervals, not exceeding
12 months, by responsible persons designated by the competent authority,
who should ensure that the labelling, expiry dates and conditions
of storage of all medicines and directions for their use are checked
and all equipment functioning as required. In adopting or reviewing
the ship’s medical guide used nationally, and in determining
the contents of the medicine chest and medical equipment, the competent
authority should take into account international recommendations in
this field, including the latest edition of the International
Medical Guide for Ships, and other guides mentioned in paragraph
2 of this Guideline.
5 Where a cargo which is classified dangerous
has not been included in the most recent edition of the Medical
First Aid Guide for Use in Accidents Involving Dangerous Goods,
the necessary information on the nature of the substances, the risks
involved, the necessary personal protective devices, the relevant
medical procedures and specific antidotes should be made available
to the seafarers. Such specific antidotes and personal protective
devices should be on board whenever dangerous goods are carried. This
information should be integrated with the ship’s policies and
programmes on occupational safety and health described in Regulation
4.3 and related Code provisions.
6 All ships should carry a complete and up-to-date
list of radio stations through which medical advice can be obtained;
and, if equipped with a system of satellite communication, carry an
up-to-date and complete list of coast earth stations through which
medical advice can be obtained. Seafarers with responsibility for
medical care or medical first aid on board should be instructed in
the use of the ship’s medical guide and the medical section
of the most recent edition of the International Code of Signals so
as to enable them to understand the type of information needed by
the advising doctor as well as the advice received.
Guideline B4.1.2 – Medical report form
1 The standard medical report form for seafarers
required under Part A of this Code should be designed to facilitate
the exchange of medical and related information concerning individual
seafarers between ship and shore in cases of illness or injury.
Guideline B4.1.3 – Medical care ashore
1 Shore-based medical facilities for treating
seafarers should be adequate for the purposes. The doctors, dentists
and other medical personnel should be properly qualified.
2 Measures should be taken to ensure that seafarers
have access when in port to:
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(a) outpatient treatment for sickness and injury;
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(b) hospitalization when necessary; and
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(c) facilities for dental treatment, especially
in cases of emergency.
3 Suitable measures should be taken to facilitate
the treatment of seafarers suffering from disease. In particular,
seafarers should be promptly admitted to clinics and hospitals ashore,
without difficulty and irrespective of nationality or religious belief,
and, whenever possible, arrangements should be made to ensure, when
necessary, continuation of treatment to supplement the medical facilities
available to them.
Guideline B4.1.4 – Medical assistance to other ships
and international cooperation
1 Each Member should give due consideration to
participating in international cooperation in the area of assistance,
programmes and research in health protection and medical care. Such
cooperation might cover:
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(a) developing and coordinating search and rescue
efforts and arranging prompt medical help and evacuation at sea for
the seriously ill or injured on board a ship through such means as
periodic ship position reporting systems, rescue coordination centres
and emergency helicopter services, in conformity with the International
Convention on Maritime Search and Rescue, 1979, as amended, and the International Aeronautical and Maritime Search and Rescue (IAMSAR)
Manual;
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(b) making optimum use of all ships carrying a
doctor and stationing ships at sea which can provide hospital and
rescue facilities;
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(c) compiling and maintaining an international
list of doctors and medical care facilities available worldwide to
provide emergency medical care to seafarers;
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(d) landing seafarers ashore for emergency treatment;
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(e) repatriating seafarers hospitalized abroad
as soon as practicable, in accordance with the medical advice of the
doctors responsible for the case, which takes into account the seafarer’s
wishes and needs;
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(f) arranging personal assistance for seafarers
during repatriation, in accordance with the medical advice of the
doctors responsible for the case, which takes into account the seafarer’s
wishes and needs;
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(g) endeavouring to set up health centres for
seafarers to:
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(i) conduct research on the health status, medical
treatment and preventive health care of seafarers; and
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(ii) train medical and health service staff in
maritime medicine;
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(h) collecting and evaluating statistics concerning
occupational accidents, diseases and fatalities of seafarers and integrating
and harmonizing the statistics with any existing national system of
statistics on occupational accidents and diseases covering other categories
of workers;
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(i) organizing international exchanges of technical
information, training material and personnel, as well as international
training courses, seminars and working groups;
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(j) providing all seafarers with special curative
and preventive health and medical services in port, or making available
to them general health, medical and rehabilitation services; and
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(k) arranging for the repatriation of the bodies
or ashes of deceased seafarers, in accordance with the wishes of the
next of kin and as soon as practicable.
2 International cooperation in the field of health
protection and medical care for seafarers should be based on bilateral
or multilateral agreements or consultations among Members.
Guideline B4.1.5 – Dependants of seafarers
1 Each Member should adopt measures to secure
proper and sufficient medical care for the dependants of seafarers
domiciled in its territory pending the development of a medical care
service which would include within its scope workers generally and
their dependants where such services do not exist and should inform
the International Labour Office concerning the measures taken for
this purpose.
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