Health, Safety and Environment
Health and Safety Facts and Figures
- Health and safety failures cost British employers between £3.3 billion and £6.5 billion every
year (1).
- There were 241 fatal injuries to workers in 2006/07 a rate of 0.8 per 100,000 workers, an
increase of 11% on the 2005/05 figures (9).
- 35.7 million working days were lost in 2006/07 from people taking time off because of their
illnesses (3).
- Over 25,000 people are forced to give up work every year as a result of work-related
accidents and ill heath (4).
- In 2006/07 an estimated 2.2 million people suffered from ill health that they thought was
work-related (9).
- Each year over one million injuries and 2.3 million cases of ill-health are experienced by
workers (4).
- More than half-a-million people suffer from work-related stress, or from an illness that they
believe to have resulted from work-related stress. (5).
- Back disorders are the most common form of ill health at work (6).
- The were 30,213 major injuries to employees in 2004/05. There were 30,817 in 2003/04. (Over a
third was caused by slipping and tripping) (2).
- In 2004/05 there were 120,346 injuries to employees causing them to be off work for over
three days. (Two fifths were caused by handling, lifting or carrying) (2).
- The number of members of the public fatally injured in 2004/05 is 361 (7).
- 2037 people died of mesothelioma (2005), and thousands more from other occupational cancers
and lung diseases (9).
- Falls from height are the most common cause of death and the second most common cause of
major injury to employees (8).
Ten Facts About Slips, Trips and Falls
Sources
- HSC Press Release
C014:02 - 23 April 2002
- HSC Press Release
C027:05 - 8 November 2005
- HSE Table SWIT1 - 2006/07 -
Working days lost due to workplace injury and work related ill health
- HSE Ready Reckoner -
Costs Overview
- HSE -
Work-Related Stress Audits
- HSE -
Back pain in the workplace: prevention and management
- HSC Press Release
C018:05 - 28 July 2005
- HSE Press Release
E114:03 - 30 June 2003
- HSE Statistics
Key figures for 2006/07 - 1 November 2007