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Posted By Alan E McKerns Empoyee falls at work and is injured (bad brusing on upper limb)returns to work after being treated at local A&E.
Is back at work the next week ok too, the week after self-certifies to say they are off due to the original incident.
RIDDOR??
Regards A
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Posted By David Whaley Alan,
Working on the principle that it's always better to report than not, I would report, assuming you are sure the original injury is work related. Reporting is not a big issue.
But that is only the start, if not already done make sure the investigation is carried out, risk assessments updated and any corrective actions carried out. If you are concerned about a possible claim consider requesting a medical opinion on the injury.
Hope this helps.
David
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Posted By PeterL Hi Alan,
I don't agree with David, not reportable in my opinion as it did not stop them completing their work for three consecutive days or more, immediately after the day of the accident (as guided by the regs.)
Cheers Pete
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Posted By J Knight Sorry, but nowhere in the regs or guidance does it say that the absence has to be immediately following the day of the injury; I have been advised by HSE in the past to report an absence which occurred some eighteen months after an accident as there was a clear link between the incident and the absence. I would certainly report in the example given,
John
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Posted By ITK Yes it is reportable under RIDDOR, as the IP is unable to resume normal duties for more than 3 consecutive days due to an injury at work.
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Posted By ITK Totally agree with John, I find it worrying someone who works for a consultancy believes this is not reportable, it most certainly is.
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Posted By Ian_P It's a funny one RIDDOR isn't it!
I would report.
No where in the regulations (or acop) does it say the three days off have to be immediately after the accident...
"where a person at work is incapacitated for work of a kind which he might reasonably be expected to do, either under his contract of employment, or, if there is no such contract, in the normal course of his work, for more than three consecutive days (excluding the day of the accident but including any days which would not have been working days"
Therefore if the employee is off work for over three days through an injury caused be an accident you should report.
Unfortunately RIDDOR isn't very clear in this and even the acop states:
"‘more than three consecutive days’ may therefore involve a degree of judgement."
My judgement would be report IF the injury is work / accident related.
Ian
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Posted By Steve B I too agree with Don, It is reportable. and Ditto to ITK.
Regards Steve B
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Posted By Ian_P Sorry J.Knight, you beat me to it.
I'm....slow...at...typing.....
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Posted By Steve B Of course I meant to say Agree with John.
Sorry
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Posted By PeterL Hi All,
In response, the key word is incapacitated the original accident did not do this to the I.P. and therefore the accident is not reportable in my opinion (see below extract).
(2) Subject to regulation 10, where a person at work is incapacitated for work of a kind which he might reasonably be expected to do, either under his contract of employment, or, if there is no such contract, in the normal course of his work, for more than three consecutive days (excluding the day of the accident but including any days which would not have been working days) because of an injury resulting from an accident arising out of or in connection with work (other than one reportable under paragraph (1) ), the responsible person shall as soon as practicable and, in any event, within 10 days of the accident send a report thereof to the relevant enforcing authority on a form approved for the purposes of this regulation, unless within that period he makes a report thereof to the Executive by some other means so approved.
Pete
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Posted By Ian_P Are you saying there you cannot be incapacitated after a time delay and it has to be immediate? Nonsense!
Man hurts his arm, continues work for an hour without realising how bad it is - then goes off work for a week. You'd reoprt that.
What's the difference if he continues to work (without realising the extent of his injuries) for 2 hours, 8 hours, another shift??
As long he is incapacitated as a result of an injury caused by an accident should you not report it in line with the reg's??
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Posted By CFT Pete
No offence meant but I completely disagree with the 'incapacitated' reference and the way in which you suggest this was not the case.
Clearly the injured party felt incapacitated because he then had to take time off to get well, there have been cases of delayed onset syndrome that ultimately ended in incapacitation.
For the fact of the 3 dayer and that it occurred at work it is reportable.
And the next one.
Charley
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Posted By Colin Reeves "Is back at work the next week ok too, the week after self-certifies to say they are off due to the original incident."
Maybe I am being cynical, but did the person play football etc in the intervening week. I agree with others that it is reportable IF it is a work related injury, but with that time gap I would want to be certain that the injury requiring time off was the self-same injury that occurred at work. Not a clear answer ....
Colin
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Posted By safety medic Hello, hello, what going on 'ere.
Just thought i'd throw my tuppence in.
the issue is'nt necessarily the fact that this is clearly reportable but why the tabboo about reporting the fact anyway?
Be honest, lets face it the HSE is hardly going to come knocking after a severly bruised arm (as bad as it is)
The important point is to establish the cause of the fall, re-assess the risk, offer the employee alternative work (this would'nt mitigate the need to report either) and support rehabilitation.
Reporting under RIDDOR helps all industries learn across the board where improvments can be made and target campaigns etc. Its not about pointing the finger.
Bear in mind that it can be specified on the form when submitting the nature of the delayed reporting following the initial incident.
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Posted By PeterL Ian,
I am only using the regs to their full extent, if the I.P. suffered bruising as diagnosed by A&E and then returned to work for a full week and subsequently signed off sick as a result of original accident for the second week as suggested, then I believe this not reportable on the basis that it was not the original injury that incapacitated the I.P. but a possible new or other injury not established as work related and therefore I would not report (proof needed).
I maintain that bruising would be clearing up by this stage and not getting worse, based remember on A&E diagnosis.
Secondly to rattle another cage was the accident work related (i.e. carrying out a task or fault or defect in premises etc.) or did the I.P. just fall, not all falls in the workplace are work related.
Pete
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Posted By ITK Peter, how can you make the assumption that unless the IP went straight off work then it is not the original injury that caused the time off work.
Would you challenge the GP if this was on a subsequent sick note.
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Posted By holmezy Hi All,
I have a similar dilemma. An employee says that he had last week off due to an injury he picked up at work 2 months ago, (not reported incidentally). I think I should report it but am reluctant.......because this is the second time something like this has happened (different employees), last time I reported it and recieved a very, very stern warning from the HSE saying it was reported late, 10 days etc etc and if it happened again, we be liable to further action. Our argument that we didnt know about it until months after the alleged date of occurence didnt make a hoot of difference.
so I'm going to sit on the fence with this one and watch how it progresses!!
Holmezy
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Posted By PeterL ITK,
Maybe i should not have said immediately, but i would not report until i had proof (doctors note)not self cert as stated.
Pete
P.S. Just playing devils advocate here!
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Posted By Alan E McKerns I have the HSE inspector on site for the week and didn't necessarily want show a degree of incompetence by asking, i have however and the response is if in doubt keep yourself right and report it.
I have.
I must admit i was going with the 3 consecutive days route - anytime.
With regard to the response about why would i feel cagey about reporting, i never do and report DO's on a weekly basis but feel it is unnecessary to bog down an overstretched enforcement agency with detail that may not have been required.
Oh and the lady in question definately does not play football.
P.S. Would it be unreasonable to suggest that the original diagnosis by A&E staff may not have been quite correct?!
Many thanks for all the responses, RIDDOR is a funny one indeed.
Regards A
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Posted By Liesel I'd always tend to say report it- better to err on side of caution, you'll soon be let know if it is isn't classified as "reportable"- but then again my experience of RIDDOR reporting is in the Rail sector where we report to HMRI not HSE and where there are lots more reportable DOs to be had (we even have a form for the "monthly returns" such as SPADs...).
Certainly HMRI have never "told off" my org, even with one situation where we did report a DO (sheared axle) rather late because no-one (a) spotted it until the scheduled stock inspection and (b)realised for another week or so it was reportable (voluntary org, my first month in the role as H&S officer!). In fact, the feedback we have always gotten is along the lines of "well done for understanding your obligations to report and doing reporting and internal investigation properly."
Again, our org has reported several times over the past few years under RIDDOR and not had any come-back or investigation- although with our most recent reportable we did have RAIB on the phone after a day or two but that is RAIRR not RIDDOR (incident was reportable under both).
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Posted By LizzieB Hi All
The extent of a person's injuries may not always be obvious or even generally detectable immediately after an accident has occurred and not reporting could catch you out.
I speak from personal experience at a previous employer's site before I knew much about accident reporting and virtually nothing about RIDDOR (still struggling with that one!)
I fell backwards off of a small step on a split level floor at one of their sites. Suffered extreme embarrassment as there were loads of witnesses, hobbled back to base, developed some fantastic bruises but, in true stiff upper lip fashion (as well as various other stiff bits), I soldiered on at work and e-mailed the other site to ask for an accident form to be completed.
Ten days later I went down with a major headache, I was taken to A & E by my husband and they diagnosed it as a cluster migraine. The following day I was rushed to A & E by my husband and spent 2 weeks in a darkened room whilst they diagnosed, using some very high-tech equipment, a split carotid artery causing nerve damage with a high probability that I would suffer a stroke/death. Thankfully neither the former(nor the latter!)happened. They determined that it was as a result of my fall.
When I was well enough to return to work 15 months later I discovered that it had never been reported to the HSE, nor even on site and, in spite of the employer receiving all my Hospital/Drs' certificates, my sickness absence had been recorded as 'Stress'.They obviously couldn't read the Docs writing!
Don't know what would have happened if I'd not recovered. I suppose it would have depended whether they were 'found out' or not.
This prompted me to get involved much more in H & S in the vain hope that I can help prevent something similar happening to someone else.
I don't believe that their non-reporting was deliberate. They were generally a good employer with large HR and H & S departments but their systems let them down.
It does, however, highlight the importance of recording all accidents and enquiring/reporting under RIDDOR if you're unsure.
It does concern me that some companies base bonus payments on the number of RIDDORs reported as this will inevitably lead to under reporting.
The issue of whether the activities of the individual between the time of the accident and the sickness absence were the cause can be argued at a later date and concerns can always be mentioned in the initial reports. Indeed, insurance companies will pick up on this as well.
For my part, I can honestly say that I didn't play football, go to the Gym or undertake any other strenuous activity in the interim as I was too stiff to move very fast!
Sorry to ramble on but one other thing that stuck in my mind immediately after falling, as I lay in a heap on the floor, were the immortal words of one of the security guards who said,
'Don't worry, dear. You're not the first person to have done that'............
Lizzie
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Posted By J Knight Hi Folks,
Just to discuss a point made by safety medic; we reported an incident recently in which nobody was hurt at all, but HSE did come knocking and went through the workplace like a dose of salts. Sometimes its not the outcome they're interested in, its the circumstances and their work-plan. What we had was a failure of a person-lifting hoist, and currently HSE is very sensitive about such things following a death in Bridlington. So HSE could come knocking after a badly bruised arm, it depends on how or why the person fell, in this case, especially since STF is a current HSE campaign,
John
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Posted By Bob Thompson CMIOSH I agree it is reportable in this instance but you dont say in your post if when he returned to work he was on full duties or not. People often forget that if a person returns on reduced duties then that is reportable after 3 days.
Bob
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Posted By safety medic John,
You are quite right. I wasn't trying to belittle the incident but just to point out that with overstreched resources the HSE is unlikely to visit unless the incident merits it. Not only might it be the type of accident or failings, but also poor investigation
The point I really wanted to get across is that as H&S professionals we should not be in fear of a visit just because we report. Looking at the stats can be an eye opener in itself and lead us as professionals to target our own work areas because others report no matter how debious the incident.
How many incidents are not reported just from arguing the text of the regulations, which leads to under-reporting and unnoticed upwards trends.
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Posted By J Knight Safety Medic,
'Strue what you say, as it happens the latest outbreak of HSE in one of our Care Centres was fruitful, and will lead to some changes in the way we do things; mainly in filing and acess to records as it happens, but useful nonetheless. And we should never be afraid to report, unless we know deep in our own hearts that we have been remiss, and then we probably have good cause to be afraid,
John
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