Date adopted: 7 August 1964
Document Number/Symbol: C121
Organization: International Labour Organisation
C121 Employment Injury Benefits Convention, 1964
Convention concerning Benefits in the Case of Employment Injury (Note: Date of coming into force: 28:07:1967.)
Description:(Convention)
Convention:C121
Place:Geneva
Session of the Conference:48
Date of adoption:08:07:1964
The General Conference of the International Labour Organisation,
Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the International Labour Office, and having met
in its Forty-eighth Session on 17 June 1964, and
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with regard to benefits in the case of industrial
accidents and occupational diseases, which is the fifth item on the agenda of the session, and
Having determined that these proposals shall take the form of an international Convention,
adopts the eighth day of July of the year one thousand nine hundred and sixty-four, the following Convention,
which may be cited as the Employment Injury Benefits Convention, 1964:
Article 1
In this Convention--
(a) the term legislation includes any social security rules as well as laws and regulations;
(b) the term prescribe means determined by or in virtue of national legislation;
(c) the term industrial undertaking includes all undertakings in the following branches of economic activity:
mining and quarrying; manufacturing; construction; electricity, gas, water and sanitary services; and
transport, storage and communication;
(d) the term dependent refers to a state of dependency which is presumed to exist in prescribed cases;
(e) the term dependent child covers--
(i) a child under school-leaving age or under 15 years of age, whichever is the higher, and
(ii) a child under a prescribed age higher than that specified in subclause (i) and who is an apprentice or
student or has a chronic illness or infirmity disabling him for any gainful activity, on conditions laid down by
national legislation: Provided that this requirement shall be deemed to be met where national legislation
defines the term so as to cover any child under an age appreciably higher than that specified in subclause
(i).
Article 2
1. A Member whose economic and medical facilities are insufficiently developed may avail itself by a
declaration accompanying its ratification of the temporary exceptions provided for in the following Articles:
Article 5, Article 9, paragraph 3, clause (b), Article 12, Article 15, paragraph 2, and Article 18, paragraph 3.
Any such declaration shall state the reason for such exceptions.
2. Each Member which has made a declaration under paragraph 1 of this Article shall include in its report
upon the application of this Convention submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of the International
Labour Organisation a statement in respect of each exception of which it avails itself--
(a) that its reason for doing so subsists; or
(b) that it renounces its right to avail itself of the exception in question as from a stated date.
Article 3
1. Any Member which ratifies this Convention may, by a declaration accompanying its ratification, exclude
from the application of the Convention--
(a) seafarers, including seafishermen,
(b) public servants, where these categories are protected by special schemes which provide in the
aggregate benefits at least equivalent to those required by this Convention.
2. Where a declaration under paragraph 1 of this Article is in force, the Member may exclude the persons
belonging to the category or categories excluded from the application of the Convention from the number of
employees when calculating the percentage of employees in compliance with paragraph 2, clause (d), of
Article 4, and with Article 5.
3. Any Member which has made a declaration under paragraph 1 of this Article may subsequently notify the
Director-General of the International Labour Office that it accepts the obligations of this Convention in
respect of a category or categories excluded at the time of its ratification.
Article 4
1. National legislation concerning employment injury benefits shall protect all employees, including
apprentices, in the public and private sectors, including co-operatives, and, in respect of the death of the
breadwinner, prescribed categories of beneficiaries.
2. Any Member may make such exceptions as it deems necessary in respect of--
(a) persons whose employment is of a casual nature and who are employed otherwise than for the purpose
of the employer's trade or business;
(b) out-workers;
(c) members of the employer's family living in his house, in respect of their work for him;
(d) other categories of employees, which shall not exceed in number 10 per cent. of all employees other than
those excluded under clauses (a) to (c).
Article 5
Where a declaration provided for in Article 2 is in force, the application of national legislation concerning
employment injury benefits may be limited to prescribed categories of employees, which shall total in
number not less than 75 per cent. of all employees in industrial undertakings, and, in respect of the death of
the breadwinner, prescribed categories of beneficiaries.
Article 6
The contingencies covered shall include the following where due to an employment injury:
(a) a morbid condition;
(b) incapacity for work resulting from such a condition and involving suspension of earnings, as defined by
national legislation;
(c) total loss of earning capacity or partial loss thereof in excess of a prescribed degree, likely to be
permanent, or corresponding loss of faculty; and
(d) the loss of support suffered as the result of the death of the breadwinner by prescribed categories of
beneficiaries.
Article 7
1. Each Member shall prescribe a definition of industrial accident, including the conditions under which a
commuting accident is considered to be an industrial accident, and shall specify the terms of such definition
in its reports upon the application of this Convention submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of the
International Labour Organisation.
2. Where commuting accidents are covered by social security schemes other than employment injury
schemes, and these schemes provide in respect of commuting accidents benefits which, when taken
together, are at least equivalent to those required under this Convention, it shall not be necessary to make
provision for commuting accidents in the definition of industrial accident.
Article 8
Each Member shall--
(a) prescribe a list of diseases, comprising at least the diseases enumerated in Schedule I to this
Convention, which shall be regarded as occupational diseases under prescribed conditions; or
(b) include in its legislation a general definition of occupational diseases broad enough to cover at least the
diseases enumerated in Schedule I to this Convention; or
(c) prescribe a list of diseases in conformity with clause (a), complemented by a general definition of
occupational diseases or by other provisions for establishing the occupational origin of diseases not so listed
or manifesting themselves under conditions different from those prescribed.
Article 9
1. Each Member shall secure to the persons protected, subject to prescribed conditions, the provision of the
following benefits:
(a) medical care and allied benefits in respect of a morbid condition;
(b) cash benefits in respect of the contingencies specified in Article 6, clauses (b), (c) and (d).
2. Eligibility for benefits may not be made subject to the length of employment, to the duration of insurance or
to the payment of contributions: Provided that a period of exposure may be prescribed for occupational
diseases.
3. The benefits shall be granted throughout the contingency: Provided that in respect of incapacity for work
the cash benefit need not be paid for the first three days--
(a) where the legislation of a Member provides for a waiting period at the date on which this Convention
comes into force, on condition that the Member includes in its reports upon the application of this Convention
submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation a statement that its
reason for availing itself of this provision subsists; or (b) where a declaration provided for in Article 2 is in
force.
Article 10
1. Medical care and allied benefits in respect of a morbid condition shall comprise--
(a) general practitioner and specialist in-patient and out-patient care, including domiciliary visiting;
(b) dental care;
(c) nursing care at home or in hospital or other medical institutions;
(d) maintenance in hospitals, convalescent homes, sanatoria or other medical institutions;
(e) dental, pharmaceutical and other medical or surgical supplies, including prosthetic appliances kept in
repair and renewed as necessary, and eyeglasses; (f) the care furnished by members of such other
professions as may at any time be legally recognised as allied to the medical profession, under the
supervision of a medical or dental practitioner; and
(g) the following treatment at the place of work, wherever possible:
(i) emergency treatment of persons sustaining a serious accident;
(ii) follow-up treatment of those whose injury is slight and does not entail discontinuance of work.
2. The benefits provided in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Article shall be afforded, using all suitable
means, with a view to maintaining, restoring or, where this is not possible, improving the health of the injured
person and his ability to work and to attend to his personal needs.
Article 11
1. Any Member which provides medical care and allied benefits by means of a general health scheme or a
medical care scheme for employed persons may specify in its legislation that such care shall be made
available to persons who have sustained employment injuries on the same terms as to other persons
entitled thereto, on condition that the rules on the subject are so designed as to avoid hardship.
2. Any Member which provides medical care and allied benefits by reimbursing expenses may in its
legislation make special rules in respect of cases in which the extent, duration or cost of such care exceed
reasonable limits, on condition that the rules on the subject are not inconsistent with the purpose stated in
paragraph 2 of Article 10 and are so designed as to avoid hardship.
Article 12
Where a declaration provided for in Article 2 is in force, medical care and allied benefits shall include at
least--
(a) general practitioner care, including domiciliary visiting;
(b) specialist care at hospitals for in-patients and out-patients, and such specialist care as may be available
outside hospitals;
(c) the essential pharmaceutical supplies on prescription by a medical or other qualified practitioner;
(d) hospitalisation, where necessary; and
(e) wherever possible, emergency treatment at the place of work of persons sustaining an industrial
accident.
Article 13
The cash benefit in respect of temporary or initial incapacity for work shall be a periodical payment
calculated in such a manner as to comply either with the requirements of Article 19 or with the requirements
of Article 20.
Article 14
1. Cash benefits in respect of loss of earning capacity likely to be permanent or corresponding loss of faculty
shall be payable in all cases in which such loss, in excess of a prescribed degree, remains at the expiration
of the period during which benefits are payable in accordance with Article 13.
2. In case of total loss of earning capacity likely to be permanent or corresponding loss of faculty, the benefit
shall be a periodical payment calculated in such a manner as to comply either with the requirements of
Article 19 or with the requirements of Article 20.
3. In case of substantial partial loss of earning capacity likely to be permanent which is in excess of a
prescribed degree, or corresponding loss of faculty, the benefit shall be a periodical payment representing a
suitable proportion of that provided for in paragraph 2 of this Article.
4. In case of partial loss of earning capacity likely to be permanent which is not substantial but which is in
excess of the prescribed degree referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article, or corresponding loss of faculty,
the cash benefit may take the form of a lump-sum payment.
5. The degrees of loss of earning capacity or corresponding loss of faculty referred to in paragraphs 1 and 3
of this Article shall be prescribed in such manner as to avoid hardship.
Article 15
1. In exceptional circumstances, and with the agreement of the injured person, all or part of the periodical
payment provided for in paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 14 may be converted into a lump sum corresponding
to the actuarial equivalent thereof when the competent authority has reason to believe that such lump sum
will be utilised in a manner which is particularly advantageous for the injured person.
2. Where a declaration provided for in Article 2 is in force and the Member concerned considers that it lacks
the necessary administrative facilities for periodical payments, the periodical payment provided for in
paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 14 may be converted into a lump sum corresponding to the actuarial equivalent
thereof, as computed on the basis of available data.
Article 16
Increments in periodical payments or other supplementary or special benefits, as prescribed, shall be
provided for disabled persons requiring the constant help or attendance of another person.
Article 17
The conditions in which periodical payments due in respect of loss of earning capacity or corresponding loss
of faculty shall be reassessed, suspended or cancelled by reference to a change in the degree of loss shall
be prescribed.
Article 18
1. The cash benefit in respect of death of the breadwinner shall be a periodical payment to a widow as
prescribed, a disabled and dependent widower, dependent children of the deceased and other persons as
may be prescribed; this payment shall be calculated in such a manner as to comply either with the
requirements of Article 19 or with the requirement of Article 20: Provided that it shall not be necessary to
make provision for a benefit to a disabled and dependent widower where the cash benefits to other survivors
are appreciably in excess of those required by this Convention and where social security schemes other
than employment injury schemes provide to such widower benefits which are appreciably in excess of those
in respect of invalidity required under the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952.
2. In addition, a funeral benefit shall be provided at a prescribed rate which shall not be less than the normal
cost of a funeral: Provided that where cash benefits to survivors are appreciably in excess of those required
by this Convention the right to funeral benefit may be made subject to prescribed conditions.
3. Where a declaration provided for in Article 2 is in force and the Member concerned considers that it lacks
the necessary administrative facilities for periodical payments, the periodical payment provided for in
paragraph 1 of this Article may be converted into a lump sum corresponding to the actuarial equivalent
thereof, as computed on the basis of available data.
Article 19
1. In the case of a periodical payment to which this Article applies, the rate of the benefit, increased by the
amount of any family allowances payable during the contingency, shall be such as to attain, in respect of the
contingency in question, for the standard beneficiary indicated in Schedule II to this Convention, at least the
percentage indicated therein of the total of the previous earnings of the beneficiary or his breadwinner and of
the amount of any family allowances payable to a person protected with the same family responsibilities as
the standard beneficiary.
2. The previous earnings of the beneficiary or his breadwinner shall be calculated according to prescribed
rules, and, where the persons protected or their breadwinners are arranged in classes according to their
earnings, their previous earnings may be calculated from the basic earnings of the classes to which they
belonged.
3. A maximum limit may be prescribed for the rate of the benefit or for the earnings taken into account for the
calculation of the benefit, provided that the maximum limit is fixed in such a way that the provisions of
paragraph 1 of this Article are complied with where the previous earnings of the beneficiary or his
breadwinner are equal to or lower than the wage of a skilled manual male employee.
4. The previous earnings of the beneficiary or his breadwinner, the wage of the skilled manual male
employee, the benefit and any family allowances shall be calculated on the same time basis.
5. For the other beneficiaries the benefit shall bear a reasonable relation to the benefit for the standard
beneficiary.
6. For the purpose of this Article, a skilled manual male employee shall be--
(a) a fitter or turner in the manufacture of machinery other than electrical machinery; or
(b) a person deemed typical of skilled labour selected in accordance with the provisions of the following
paragraph; or
(c) a person whose earnings are such as to be equal to or greater than the earnings of 75 per cent of all the
persons protected, such earnings to be determined on the basis of annual or shorter periods as may be
prescribed; or
(d) a person whose earnings are equal to 125 per cent of the average earnings of all the persons protected.
7. The person deemed typical of skilled labour for the purpose of clause (b) of the preceding paragraph shall
be a person employed in the major group of economic activities with the largest number of economically
active male persons protected in the contingency in question, or of the breadwinners of the persons
protected, as the case may be, in the division comprising the largest number of such persons or
breadwinners; for this purpose, the international standard industrial classification of all economic activities,
adopted by the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations at its Seventh Session on 27 August
1948, as amended and reproduced in the Annex to this Convention, or such classification as at any time
further amended, shall be used.
8. Where the rate of benefit varies by region, the skilled manual male employee may be determined for each
region in accordance with paragraphs 6 and 7 of this Article.
9. The wage of the skilled manual male employee shall be determined on the basis of the rates of wages for
normal hours of work fixed by collective agreements, by or in pursuance of national laws or regulations,
where applicable, or by custom, including cost-of-living allowances, if any; where such rates differ by region
but paragraph 8 of this Article is not applied, the median rate shall be taken.
10. No periodical payment shall be less than a prescribed minimum amount.
Article 20
1. In the case of a periodical payment to which this Article applies, the rate of the benefit, increased by the
amount of any family allowances payable during the contingency, shall be such as to attain, in respect of the
contingency in question, for the standard beneficiary indicated in Schedule II to this Convention, at least the
percentage indicated therein of the total of the wage of an ordinary adult male labourer and of the amount of
any family allowances payable to a person protected with the same family responsibilities as the standard
beneficiary.
2. The wage of the ordinary adult male labourer, the benefit and any family allowances shall be calculated on
the same time basis.
3. For the other beneficiaries, the benefit shall bear a reasonable relation to the benefit for the standard
beneficiary.
4. For the purpose of this Article, the ordinary adult male labourer shall be--
(a) a person deemed typical of unskilled labour in the manufacture of machinery other than electrical
machinery; or
(b) a person deemed typical of unskilled labour selected in accordance with the provisions of the following
paragraph.
5. The person deemed typical of unskilled labour for the purpose of clause (b) of the preceding paragraph
shall be a person employed in the major group of economic activities with the largest number of
economically active male persons protected in the contingency in question, or of the breadwinners of the
persons protected, as the case may be, in the division comprising the largest number of such persons or
breadwinners; for this purpose the international standard industrial classification of all economic activities,
adopted by the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations at its Seventh Session on 27 August
1948, as amended and reproduced in the Annex to this Convention, or such classification as at any time
further amended, shall be used.
6. Where the rate of benefit varies by region, the ordinary adult male labourer may be determined for each
region in accordance with paragraphs 4 and 5 of this Article.
7. The wage of the ordinary adult male labourer shall be determined on the basis of the rates of wages for
normal hours of work fixed by collective agreements, by or in pursuance of national laws or regulations,
where applicable, or by custom, including cost-of-living allowances if any; where such rates differ by region
but paragraph 6 of this Article is not applied, the median rate shall be taken.
8. No periodical payment shall be less than a prescribed minimum amount.
Article 21
1. The rates of cash benefits currently payable pursuant to paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article 14 and paragraph 1
of Article 18 shall be reviewed following substantial changes in the general level of earnings where these
result from substantial changes in the cost of living.
2. Each Member shall include the findings of such reviews in its reports upon the application of this
Convention submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation, and shall
specify any action taken.
Article 22
1. A benefit to which a person protected would otherwise be entitled in compliance with this Convention may
be suspended to such extent as may be prescribed--
(a) as long as the person concerned is absent from the territory of the Member;
(b) as long as the person concerned is maintained at public expense or at the expense of a social security
institution or service;
(c) where the person concerned has made a fraudulent claim;
(d) where the employment injury has been caused by a criminal offence committed by the person
concerned;
(e) where the employment injury has been caused by voluntary intoxication or by the serious and wilful
misconduct of the person concerned;
(f) where the person concerned, without good cause, neglects to make use of the medical care and allied
benefits or the rehabilitation services placed at his disposal, or fails to comply with rules prescribed for
verifying the occurrence or continuance of the contingency or for the conduct of beneficiaries; and
(g) as long as the surviving spouse is living with another person as spouse.
2. In the cases and within the limits prescribed, part of the cash benefit otherwise due shall be paid to the
dependants of the person concerned.
Article 23
1. Every claimant shall have a right of appeal in the case of refusal of the benefit or complaint as to its quality
or quantity.
2. Where in the application of this Convention a government department responsible to a legislature is
entrusted with the administration of medical care, the right of appeal provided for in paragraph 1 of this Article
may be replaced by a right to have a complaint concerning the refusal of medical care or the quality of the
care received investigated by the appropriate authority.
3. Where a claim is settled by a special tribunal established to deal with employment injury benefit questions
or with social security questions in general and on which the persons protected are represented, no right of
appeal shall be required.
Article 24
1. Where the administration is not entrusted to an institution regulated by the public authorities or to a
government department responsible to a legislature, representatives of the persons protected shall
participate in the management, or be associated therewith in a consultative capacity, under prescribed
conditions; national legislation may likewise decide as to the participation of representatives of employers
and of the public authorities.
2. The Member shall accept general responsibility for the proper administration of the institutions or services
concerned in the application of this Convention.
Article 25
Each Member shall accept general responsibility for the due provision of the benefits provided in compliance
with this Convention and shall take all measures required for this purpose.
Article 26
1. Each Member shall, under prescribed conditions--
(a) take measures to prevent industrial accidents and occupational diseases;
(b) provide rehabilitation services which are designed to prepare a disabled person wherever possible for the
resumption of his previous activity, or, if this is not possible, the most suitable alternative gainful activity,
having regard to his aptitudes and capacity; and
(c) take measures to further the placement of disabled persons in suitable employment.
2. Each Member shall as far as possible furnish in its reports upon the application of this Convention
submitted under article 22 of the Constitution of the International Labour Organisation information concerning
the frequency and severity of industrial accidents.
Article 27
Each Member shall within its territory assure to non-nationals equality of treatment with its own nationals as
regards employment injury benefits.
Article 28
1. This Convention No. 121 revises the Workmen's Compensation (Agriculture) Convention, 1921, the
Workmen's Compensation (Accidents) Convention, 1925, the Workmen's Compensation (Occupational
Diseases) Convention, 1925, and the Workmen's Compensation (Occupational Diseases) Convention
(Revised), 1934.
2. Ratification of this Convention by a Member which is a party to the Workmen's Compensation
(Occupational Diseases) Convention (Revised), 1934, shall, in accordance with Article 8 thereof, ipso jure
involve the immediate denunciation of that Convention, if and when this Convention shall have come into
force, but the coming into force of this Convention shall not close that Convention to further ratification.
Article 29
In conformity with Article 75 of the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952, Part VI of that
Convention and the relevant provisions of other Parts thereof shall cease to apply to any Member having
ratified this Convention as from the date at which this Convention comes into force for that Member, but
acceptance of the obligations of this Convention shall be deemed to constitute acceptance of the obligations
of Part VI of the Social Security (Minimum Standards) Convention, 1952, and the relevant provisions of other
Parts thereof, for the purpose of Article 2 of the said Convention.
Article 30
If any Convention which may be adopted subsequently by the Conference concerning any subject or
subjects dealt with in this Convention so provides, such provisions of this Convention as may be specified in
the said Convention shall cease to apply to any Member having ratified the said Convention as from the date
at which the said Convention comes into force for that Member.
Article 31
1. The International Labour Conference may, at any session at which the matter is included in its agenda,
adopt by a two-thirds majority amendments to Schedule I to this Convention.
2. Such amendments shall take effect in respect of any Member already a party to the Convention when
such Member notifies the Director-General of the International Labour Office of its acceptance thereof.
3. Unless the Conference otherwise decides when adopting an amendment, an amendment shall be
effective, by reason of its adoption by the Conference, in respect of any Member subsequently ratifying the
Convention.
Article 32
The formal ratifications of this Convention shall be communicated to the Director-General of the International
Labour Office for registration.
Article 33
1. This Convention shall be binding only upon those Members of the International Labour Organisation whose
ratifications have been registered with the Director-General.
2. It shall come into force twelve months after the date on which the ratifications of two Members have been
registered with the Director-General.
3. Thereafter, this Convention shall come into force for any Member twelve months after the date on which
its ratifications has been registered.
Article 34
1. A Member which has ratified this Convention may denounce it after the expiration of ten years from the
date on which the Convention first comes into force, by an Act communicated to the Director-General of the
International Labour Office for registration. Such denunciation should not take effect until one year after the
date on which it is registered.
2. Each Member which has ratified this Convention and which does not, within the year following the
expiration of the period of ten years mentioned in the preceding paragraph, exercise the right of denunciation
provided for in this Article, will be bound for another period of ten years and, thereafter, may denounce this
Convention at the expiration of each period of ten years under the terms provided for in this Article.
Article 35
1. The Director-General of the International Labour Office shall notify all Members of the International Labour
Organisation of the registration of all ratifications and denunciations communicated to him by the Members
of the Organisation.
2. When notifying the Members of the Organisation of the registration of the second ratification
communicated to him, the Director-General shall draw the attention of the Members of the Organisation to
the date upon which the Convention will come into force.
Article 36
The Director-General of the International Labour Office shall communicate to the Secretary-General of the
United Nations for registration in accordance with Article 102 of the Charter of the United Nations full
particulars of all ratifications and acts of denunciation registered by him in accordance with the provisions of
the preceding Articles.
Article 37
At such times as may consider necessary the Governing Body of the International Labour Office shall
present to the General Conference a report on the working of this Convention and shall examine the
desirability of placing on the agenda of the Conference the question of its revision in whole or in part.
Article 38
1. Should the Conference adopt a new Convention revising this Convention in whole or in part, then, unless
the new Convention otherwise provides:
a) the ratification by a Member of the new revising Convention shall ipso jure involve the immediate
denunciation of this Convention, notwithstanding the provisions of Article 34 above, if and when the new
revising Convention shall have come into force;
b) as from the date when the new revising Convention comes into force this Convention shall cease to be
open to ratification by the Members.
2. This Convention shall in any case remain in force in its actual form and content for those Members which
have ratified it but have not ratified the revising Convention.
Article 39
The English and French versions of the text of this Convention are equally authoritative.
SCHEDULE I. LIST OF OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES
(AMENDED 1980)
Occupational diseases Work involving exposure to risk
1. Pneumoconioses caused by All work involving exposure to the
sclerogenetic mineral dust risk concerned.
(silicosis, anthraco-silicosis,
asbestosis) and
silico-tuberculosis, provided
that silicosis is an essential
factor in causing the resultant
incapacity or death.
2. Bronchopulmonary diseases "
caused by hard-metal dust.
3. Bronchopulmonary diseases "
caused by cotton dust
(byssinosis), or flax, hemp or
sisal dust.
4. Occupational asthma caused "
by sensitising agents or
irritants both recognised in
this regard and inherent in
the work process.
5. Extrinsic allergic alveolitis "
and its sequalae caused by the
inhalation of organic dusts,
as prescribed by national
legislation.
6. Diseases caused by beryllium "
or its toxic compounds.
7. Diseases caused by cadmium "
or its toxic compounds.
8. Diseases caused by "
phosphorus or its toxic
compounds.
9. Diseases caused by chromium "
or its toxic compounds.
10. Diseases caused by "
manganese or its toxic
compounds.
11. Diseases caused by arsenic "
or its toxic compounds.
12. Diseases caused by mercury "
or its toxic compounds.
13. Diseases caused by lead or "
its toxic compounds.
14. Diseases caused by fluorine "
or its toxic compounds.
15. Diseases caused by carbon "
disulfide.
16. Diseases caused by the "
toxic halogen derivatives
of aliphatic or aromatic
hydrocarbons.
17. Diseases caused by benzene "
or its toxic homologues.
18. Diseases caused by toxic "
nitro- and amino- derivatives
of benzene or its homologues.
19. Diseases caused by "
nitroglycerin or other nitric
acid esters.
20. Diseases caused by "
alcohols, glycols or ketones.
21. Diseases caused by "
asphyxiants: carbon monoxide,
hydrogen cyanide or its toxic
derivatives, hydrogen sulfide.
22. Hearing impairment "
caused by noise.
23. Diseases caused by "
vibration (disorders of
muscles, tendons, bones,
joints, peripheral blood
vessels or peripheral
nerves).
24. Diseases caused by work "
in compressed air.
25. Diseases caused by All work involving exposure to
ionising radiations. the action of ionising.
radiations.
26. Skin diseases caused by All work involving exposure to
physical, chemical or the risk concerned.
biological agents not
included under other items.
27. Primary epitheliomatous "
cancer of the skin caused by
tar, pitch, bitumen, mineral
oil, anthracene, or the
compounds, products or
residues of these substances.
28. Lung cancer or "
mesotheliomas caused by
asbestos.
29. Infectious or parasitic (a) Health or laboratory work.
diseases contracted in an (b) Veterinary work.
occupation where there is a (c) Work handling animals, animal
particular risk of carcasses, parts of such
contamination. carcasses, or merchandise
which may have been
contaminated by animals,
animal carcasses, or parts of
such carcasses.
(d) Other work carrying a
particular risk of
contamination.
SCHEDULE II. PERIODICAL PAYMENTS TO STANDARD BENEFICIARIES
Contingency Standard beneficiary Percentage
1. Temporary or Man with wife and two 60
initial capacity children
for work
2. Total loss of Man with wife and two 60
earning capacity children
or corresponding
loss of faculty
3. Death of Widow with two children 50
breadwinner
ANNEX
International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities (Note: Not reproduced. The
classification originally appended has been superseded by the version revised in 1968 (see Convention No.
130, Annex).)