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Latest workplace injury figures show slight improvement

Provisional statistics published by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) on workplace ill health and injury in Britain between April 2011 and March 2012 have shown a slight improvement in a number of key areas.

According to the figures:

  • 22,433 major injuries such as amputations, fractures and burns, to employees were reported - a rate of 89.90 injuries per 100,000 workers - compared with 24,944 in 2010/11. The average for the past five years is 27,170.
  • 88,731 other injuries serious enough to keep people off work for four or more days were reported - a rate of 355.5 injuries per 100,000 employees - down from 91,742 the previous year. The average for the past five years is 103,627.
  • An estimated 1.1 million people said they were suffering from an illness caused or made worse by their work, down from 1.2 million in 2010/11. Of these, 452,000 were new illnesses occurring in-year. The average for the past five years was 1.25 million with an average 554,000 new cases each year.
  • 173 workers fatally injured - down from 175 the previous year. The average for the past five years was 196 worker deaths per year.

The toll of injury and ill-health resulted in 27 million working days being lost, an average of 16.8 days per case, with 22.7 million days lost to ill-health and 4.3 million days lost to injuries. These figures are up slightly on 2010/11 when 26.4 million working days were lost.

Workplace injuries and ill-health (excluding work related cancer) cost society an estimated £13.4 billion in 2010/11.

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