English, asked by Keniti002, 9 months ago

Write a paragraph on the contribution of Frontline workers

Answers

Answered by daregaming592
7

Hey Dear May it will help u

Frontline Workers

We see frontline workers every day, but we don’t always recognize their importance. They are the face of every business, and the first and last person many customers interact with during their journey. Frontline workers are how your customers engage with you outside your walls.

Let’s examine three frontline workers that change the world daily.

Nurses: Everyone has encountered nurses at some point in their lives, starting with birth and progressing through routine check-ups and the occasional medical emergency. Nurses are on the front line of the medical industry, yet they are often overworked and underappreciated. In a recent survey by the American Nurses Association, 58% of nurses say their workload has increased in the last 12 months. This means that they are forced to get more done and need tools to improve productivity. One way that nurses can accomplish this is with mobile fleet management solutions that allow immediate bedside access to patient files. This can save countless hours and improve patient outcomes. MobileIron can ensure access to these files is immediate, and secure.

Retail workers: Some of us love shopping, while others detest it. Whichever category you fall into, it helps if your shopping experience is efficient, hassle free, and possibly even fun. Retail salespeople drive this experience and can make shopping a positive customer engagement, or a negative one that causes a shopper never to return. These retail employees need tools to help customers find what they are looking for, search current inventory, and even complete transactions without waiting in a checkout line. These are all experiences that a MobileIron-enabled retail worker can provide.

Transportation employees: Travel for vacation can be something we look forward to all year while business travel is often dreaded. In a recent survey from the American Travel Association, Americans skipped 32 million trips last year because they hate flying. The days of wearing suits and cocktail attire to fly the friendly skies has long since passed. However, that doesn’t mean that transportation employees still can’t provide a great customer experience. Mobile-enabled coach and train workers can check in passengers and their bags curbside, and an automated kiosk can do the same for air passengers. These tools, empowered by MobileIron, provide a level of efficiency that improves the customer experience and drives repeat business.

These are just three examples of frontline workers who assist customers, provide care, and drive efficiency every day. Because of their direct and frequent contact with the end customer, the frontline worker is the most important employee.

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Explanation:

It is A full about Frontline workers

Answered by nvssushanth46
0

Most of us continue to rely on media stories and our experiences in daily life to identify frontline workers: butchers at meatpacking plants, bus drivers, grocery workers, and health care providers. But there are millions of more workers on the frontlines; we need clearer metrics to complement these broader narratives. We cannot afford to overlook workers some of us may not see, both now and after COVID-19. Failing to recognize and protect frontline workers harms our public health and economy.

Protecting all essential workers is important, but defining the subset of essential workers who must physically report to their jobs and are most vulnerable to health risks—what we call “frontline” workers—demands greater attention. Which raises the central question: Exactly how many of these workers are commuting each day versus how many can safely stay home?

Using a mix of Department of Homeland Security definitions and Bureau of Labor Statistics data, we have found 50 million people who qualify as frontline workers—a majority of the 90 million people employed in America’s essential industries. This brief builds off of and updates our initial analysis of essential industries from the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic by highlighting how frontline workers earn lower wages, are less educated, and are more likely to be people of color than national averages.

Their size and composition only underscore the need to protect frontline workers. Without more specific definitions, it will be hard to prioritize their safety and determine the cost and eligibility for pandemic-specific benefits, such as additional equipment, insurance, sick leave, hazard pay, and other protections.

To protect today’s frontline workers and to ensure the country is better prepared for the next pandemic, the federal government must create a formal list of essential industries and their frontline workforces. We support policies that will expand health and life insurance, deliver protective equipment, and guarantee sick leave and hazard pay. The following recommendations will help scale and prioritize those policies:

Congress should designate one or more federal agencies to regularly update the list of frontline occupations and essential industries as it relates to pandemics and other public emergencies. Labor groups, industry leaders, researchers, and public health experts should provide input on these lists. This collective input can help inform and target social, income, and other policies.

Congress should use these lists to determine the size of the country’s national security stockpile—which includes protective equipment and medical devices—to be able to rapidly safeguard the frontline workforce during a future pandemic.

Congress should establish a special commission to determine how federal “essential industry” and “frontline occupations” lists should legally relate to related state and local designations. These should specifically designate how federal benefits will flow to individuals based on state and local reopening lists, since the number and categories of workers will grow in time.

WHY DEFINITIONS ARE IMPORTANT

Since the COVID-19 national lockdowns began, the term “frontline workers” has emerged to capture the vast number of people who must still report to work in the face of unknown threats to their physical health. Yet the term itself is informal; there is no legal definition of a frontline worker.

There is also no set definition of an “essential industry,” another commonly used term since the pandemic began. Ostensibly, an essential industry refers to businesses and other establishments that must stay open during a public health emergency. But in the digital age, telecommuting allows industries to stay open while employees stay home. There is no clarity on how many people working in essential industries are frontline workers who still report to the job site.

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