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WorkSafe Victoria calls for renewed focus on OHS following 2020 fatalities

29 Mar 2021 9:11 AM | Anonymous

WorkSafe Victoria recently called on employers and workers to prioritise health and safety in the workplace following the deaths of 65 workers in 2020.

The toll includes 29 workers who died in a Victorian workplace incident and 20 workers who died in work-related road incidents.

A further 13 workers died from the effects of disease contracted as a result of their work, one worker died following a workplace-related medical incident and one worker died from a workplace-related suicide.

As of 1 July, the criteria for defining a workplace fatality was broadened to include deaths from work-related transport incidents, disease, criminal acts, and medical or suicide incidents.


WorkSafe Victoria chief executive Colin Radford said 20 work-related road deaths was a sobering reminder that employers have a duty to protect all their workers, no matter where they are employed.

“It doesn’t matter if workers are on a construction site, at the farm, in an office or on the road – health and safety should travel with them wherever they are working,” he said.

“Employers must ensure they implement systems of work to manage fatigue, ensure drivers are properly trained and licensed, and that vehicles are maintained in a safe condition.”

There were 12 deaths in the public administration and safety industry in 2020, which was the most dangerous industry in the state.

This includes the deaths of four police officers killed on the Eastern Freeway in April and five emergency services personnel who died from the effects of diseases contracted at work.

Other dangerous industries included manufacturing and transport, postal and warehousing (10 deaths respectively); agriculture, forestry and fishing; and construction (nine deaths respectively).

The most dangerous occupation was truck driving following the deaths of nine workers in 2020, a decrease from 13 in the year before.

Thirty deaths involved moving vehicles and heavy machinery, which were the most dangerous hazards in workplaces.

“It is unacceptable for so many deaths to involve trucks, machinery and mobile plant when the risks and how to control them are well known for these hazards,” Radford said.

“Slow down, check your systems of work and make sure you are doing everything possible to eliminate or manage these risks because the cost of not doing so can be a life.”

This article is a news item provided by the Australian Institute of Health & Safety.


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