HSE International ISSUE 110 | Page 44

BOHS - BRITISH OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE SOCIETY BOHS COMMENTS ON LATEST HEALTH AND STATISTICS While the latest health and safety statistics are encouraging, the cost of work-related ill health is still too high. B OHS, the Chartered Society for Worker Health Protection, has welcomed the latest health and safety at work statistics 1 , recently published by the Health & Safety Executive (HSE). The new statistics provide an extremely useful and comprehensive illustration of work-related health and safety in the UK. Simon Festing, CEO of BOHS stated: “While some of the trends are encouraging, many of the figures remain concerningly high, clearly indicating that in terms of ensuring best practice in worker health protection, many challenges remain. It’s vital that both employers and employees embrace effective occupational hygiene practice, in order to reduce the burden and human cost of work-related ill health.” HEADLINE STATISTICS AND TRENDS Key statistics from the HSE’s report include: • • • • • 44 1.3 million working people are suffering from a work- related illness (new or long-standing). 25.7 million working days were lost due to work-related ill health (2016/17). 13,000 deaths each year are estimated to be linked to past exposures at work, primarily chemicals or dust: occupational lung diseases account for around 12,000 of these deaths. 2,542 mesothelioma deaths are due to past exposure to asbestos 2 . The projection is that there will be around 2,500 mesothelioma deaths per year to the end of the decade, before a decline in numbers is seen. £14.9 billion is the estimated cost of injuries and ill health, due to current working conditions 3 (this figure excludes long latency illness such as cancer). HSE INTERNATIONAL Although the above figures may seem alarmingly high, a few of the overall trends depict a slightly more encouraging picture: • • • • Since 2001, the overall rate of work-related ill health demonstrated a slight downward trend, with a broadly flat scale since 2014. The number of working days lost per worker, due to work related ill health, demonstrated a downward trend until approximately 2010/11, with a broadly flat rate thereafter. The UK has lower rates of work-related ill heath than most other EU countries. However, despite some of the key figures remaining flat – as opposed to showing an actual increase - there is clearly still cause for concern that the overall human costs of work-related ill health remain too high, further underlining an evident need for the work BOHS undertakes to raise awareness of the benefits of occupational hygiene. WORKING TOGETHER TO RAISE AWARENESS Critical to the success of reducing workplace ill health, is that everyone embraces their responsibilities - employers have a duty to ensure that everyone can ‘Go Home Healthy’ from work, and employees need to play their part too: this is one of the HSE’s key campaigns currently, encouraging everyone to ‘do the right thing’ and protect workers’ health. Additionally, highlighting and tackling the costs of work- related ill health is one of the six themes of the HSE’s five- year strategy ‘Helping Great Britain work well’, launched in 2016. 