Off-the-job worker injuries outpacing safety gains

February 20, 2006

Contrary to popular belief, today’s workers are safer on the job than they are at home or in their communities. According to the National Safety Council, recent gains in lowering workplace death rates, which are down 17 percent since 1992, have been undone by the rate of fatalities occurring off the job, up 14 percent in that same period.

However, while corporate America has made dramatic gains in workplace safety, businesses are losing money on accidents unrelated to the workplace.

“The business costs of off-the-job accidents is staggering when you take into account lost wages and productivity, medical and disability payments, and training for new employees,” said Alan C. McMillan, president and CEO of the National Safety Council.

According to 2004 National Safety Council statistics being presented at the nation’s first Off the Job Safety Symposium in Orlando later this month, twice as many workers, or 6.8 million, were seriously injured while off the job than were injured while working. Of the 49,000 injury-related deaths in 2004 involving workers, roughly 90 percent occurred while employees were off the job.

Injury costs
In 2004, the cost of employee injuries, both on and off the job, was more than $330 billion. Nearly 60 percent or $200 billion was for injuries to employees who were off the job. According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, more is spent by private health insurance on medical care associated with trauma and poisoning for people of working age than for any other health condition including cancer, heart conditions, mental disorders or upper respiratory conditions and asthma.

In addition, off-the-job injuries accounted for employers losing 165 million days of production time, compared with 80 million lost workdays as a result of workplace injuries.

Increasingly, businesses are recognizing the value of keeping their employees safe at all times both on and off the job. In a recent National Safety Council survey of 1,300 companies of varying sizes, the impact of off-the-job safety training has begun to be felt at businesses that have implemented programs. Of those who have implemented off-the-job programs, 58 percent reported reductions in injuries occurring outside of work.

In addition, research presented at the 17th World Congress on Safety and Health at Work last fall found that for every dollar businesses spend on safety, they realize a $3 to $6 savings.

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