OHCOW, the Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario Workers, marked its 35th anniversary on Friday with an open house at the Sudbury office on Westmount Avenue.
While the group achieved a significant victory by linking McIntyre Powder to Parkinson’s disease in Northern Ontario miners two years ago, they continue to address various workplace-associated illnesses and injuries. The McIntyre Powder campaign remains ongoing.
Brittney Ramakko, the executive director of the Northern Region at the Sudbury office, highlighted one of OHCOW’s key aims: assisting workers in establishing the work-related nature of their illness or injury.
This raises the question of how OHCOW differs from WSIB, Ontario’s Workplace Safety and Insurance Board, designed to compensate workers claiming workplace-related injuries or illnesses.
“So many of our clients applied for WSIB but were denied,” Ramakko explained.
“So they can come to us. We have teams including an occupational health nurse, occupational hygienist, ergonomists, and physicians. They’ll review and provide an independent evaluation. Additionally, you can come in for a second opinion,” she explained.
Ramakko clarified that OHCOW’s role isn’t to refute WSIB but to meticulously examine any medical or work-related details that might have been overlooked.
Furthermore, she added that OHCOW gathers information from workers on bleak working conditions that could contribute to occupational illness or injury.
OHCOW: Identifying Workplace Hazards and Providing Regional Services
The OHCOW website outlines various workplace hazards, including exposure to vapors, gases, mold, allergens, dangerous chemicals, diesel exhaust particulate, silica, asbestos, noise, and even smoke from wildfires.
Ramakko mentioned that although the community might be aware of the work being done across the North by the Sudbury office, there are, in fact, seven OHCOW clinics located across Ontario – Thunder Bay, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto, Sarnia, Windsor, and Sudbury.
Moreover, she stated that the Sudbury office recently moved from a downtown venue to the new spaces at 432 Westmount Avenue, off of BarryDowne.