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#1 Posted : 17 December 2003 11:43:00(UTC)
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Posted By Neal Robertson Scenario provided by a colleague, any views to complement ours appreciated. Employee finished work for the day, crossing public highway away from workplace to catch a bus. She is knocked down by a delivery lorry heading to her workplace (not her employers vehicle) but not seriously injured. Should this be recorded in the accident book?
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#2 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:19:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave Wilson No! person is not 'at work'
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#3 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:21:00(UTC)
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Posted By Shane Johnston Accident did not happen at the place of work, nor was the employee acting on the employers behalf ... so it does not need to be recorded. Shane
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#4 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:34:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Abbott No. - Just thought I'd keep my answer as simple as possible... Shorter than Dave's anyway ;) Have a good Christmas!
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#5 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:40:00(UTC)
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Posted By Peter MacDonald If she had been working excessive hours, say a double 12hr shift, and had stumbled onto the road due to the effects of tiredness would this change anything. Peter
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#6 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:47:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave Wilson Shane yours is over 100% longer!
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#7 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:48:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave Wilson OOPS!
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#8 Posted : 17 December 2003 12:54:00(UTC)
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Posted By Pat Burns MIOSH - SpDipEM - AMIQA Under the current legislation there is no legal requirement for the employer to record this accident in any form. However,the injured person's employer could be recording data such as accidents outside the work as a result of travelling to and from their workplace. This could be for their own statistical analysis or to highlight a safety hazard outside the workplace. The driver of the vehicle is required though to record the details and report the accident to the police, (injured person)his employer and insurance company.
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#9 Posted : 18 December 2003 08:23:00(UTC)
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Posted By Neal Robertson Thanks for all response. My colleague has taken action just as Pat described, details kept on file in case of future absence (NOT in accident book), accident reported to Police etc. He just wanted to make sure all bases were covered in case any ambulance chasing lawyers came sniffing round. Thanks again, seasons greetings to all.
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#10 Posted : 19 December 2003 12:09:00(UTC)
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Posted By AL Surely it is up to the injured person to decide what goes in the accident book and not the employer. The employer is there to provide the book not police it. If he does not agree with the content of the report then that should also be entered. the employee may for some reason feel it is work related and so can put it in the book if they want. It would then be up to some one else (Dpt work/pensions etc)if it is valid in the event of a claim of some discription. AL
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