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How can it be ensured that our regulatory approach accommodates future trends in work demographics, working patterns, new technologies, health hazards and new uses for old substances?

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Increase and maintain trust to ensurepeople feel safe where they live, wherethey work, and in their environment

This problem is a UK government area of research interest (ARI) that was originally posted at https://ari.org.uk/ by a UK government organisation to indicate that they are keen to see research related to this area.

How can it be ensured that our regulatory approach accommodates future trends in work demographics, working patterns, new technologies, health hazards and new uses for old substances?

To enable strategic and transformative advances in health and safety across the diverse construction sector through technology and innovation and the new opportunities and risks arising from it. To underpin construction and building safety regulatory regimes with evidence-based approaches and enable effective oversight across the whole built environment. To inform standards and guidance development to improve the safety and standard of buildings and develop effective strategies to measure and build competence across the construction and building safety sectors. To ensure that our approach to regulating chemicals and microbial control agents: is effective, efficient and agile, reflecting current and developing scientific understanding and technical knowledge; reinforces our position as an internationally influential regulator; and enables society to derive the benefits of access to safe and sustainable use of chemicals; and ensure there is no harm to workers, bystanders and consumers or unacceptable effects on the environment.

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hsecsa@hse.gov.uk

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This Research Problem does not have any specified conflicts of interest.