Thanks Smitch and imwaldra
I’m not sure I agree with the report. It states you should use frequency rates opposed to actual numbers, I agree with this saying one person had a serious injury is meaningless unless it is expressed in terms of how many people there are or amount of work done by those people. But by its very nature a frequency rate is a ratio of accidents / hours worked, so will be the same number for 10 people, 100 people or 1000 people, isn’t it.
So you employ 10 people and you have one serious injury that would be (1 x 100,000) / 20,000 =5 ( I have used the reports 100 people work 200,000 hrs so 1 person works 2,000 per year).
If you pro rata it up from 10 employees to 100 ( x by 10) you get (1 x 10 x100,000)/ 200,000 = 5
Or is it suggesting you only increase the hours ! so you get 0.5, I would not be comfortable with that.
I have to admit I find the comment in the report “very few have systems for measuring total hours worked” hard to accept. Personally I have found people not paid their overtime get a little peeved, so Company’s must have a system for recording this and would have thought it would be on either some fancy accounts package or a simple spread sheet for smaller companies. If nothing else the tax man wants to know how much everyone is paid, so there must be records of hours worked. My view would therefore be this information is more readily available than ever before. Yes some hours will not be recorded by managers who often don’t get paid overtime (or at least I did not).
If in the above example each of the 10 employees worked 2 hours a week overtime throughout the year that adds an additional 1,000 hours so you would get (1x100,000)/21,000= 4.76 this is a 5% reduction and not cheating just recording accurately.
I know the company I worked for the statistics were very important for new business, I also know for others it is not the same, so each to their own.
Also the report suggests reporting fatalities per 10,000 workers, again this should be a ratio, So 1 fatality with 10 workers would still = 5 AFR for fatalities again unless it is suggesting either
a) (1 x1000 x 100,000)/20,000,000 = 5 (no difference) or
b) (1x 100,000)/20,000,000 = 0.005 !!!!
Perhaps I’m reading it incorrectly or they should have put some worked examples to clarify what they mean. Because either what they are suggesting is pointless or they are suggesting ways to water down your statistics (which I’m sure they are not).
Am I the only person who is misreading the report? Or is there a flaw in the logic I used.
Sorry if I have hijacked the original thread, but I think clarity is worthwhile.