HSE has been rather coy recently but according to the TUC tacking-workplace-stress-guide.pdf (tuc.org.uk) the HSE Stress Management Standards were launched in 2004. This date is no longer visible on the HSE website pages on the topic.
Since which time I don't think HSE has ever enforced these Standards by e.g. prosecution or enforcement notice, though it is difficult to confirm as the detail on the HSE prosecutions databases often fails to include the "case summary" to provide some explanation of the rationale for why a specific case have been taken.
As has been indicated you would expect HSE (or other enforcing authority) to investigate most if not all of RIDDOR reportable fatal accidents.
Indeed in Scotland there is legislation directing that a Fatal Accident Inquiry be held following every fatal accident at work UNLESS the case can be adequately disposed of in some other public hearing - so that for example if such an accident results in a prosecution, sometimes this is used as a substitute for an FAI.
In practice, the need to inform the Procurator Fiscal in advance of such a hearing means that the enforcing authorities investigate all the incidents that appear to be fatal accidents at work, and certainly in the past, we erred on the safe side and left it to the Procurator Fiscal to decide NOT to hold an FAI if they concluded that an incident might not be work-related.
So, as example one Tuesday I went out to get details of the circumstances in which a roofer had fallen to his death from the roof of the building in which he lived the previous day. At least arguably he had been in the course of his self-employment as there was an informal agreement in place that he would do minor repairs on behalf of himself and the other occupants of the building, who collectively might be a non-domestic client with duties under Sections 3 or 4 of HSWA.
This was never going to go to prosecution as the primary duty holder was dead and had fallen with a very high blood-alcohol content the morning after the night before.
But nevertheless, we treated it as work-related and duly submitted a short report to the Fiscal. There was no FAI to my knowledge and my guess is that the PF's office decided to treat the incident as not work-related.
So, even with a fatal accident the lines can be blurred as to the issue of whether the incident was work-related.
This is MUCH more difficult when it comes to deciding whether stress is work-related whatever the severity of outcome with suicide at the top level of severity.
This doesn't mean that I don't think that the HSE shouldn't be investigating suicides that appear to be potentially work-related. I do think they should, and probably in past times HSE would have been keener to take a more proactive position.
But it would be a huge step to legislate to force the HSE to investigate any suicide that might just possibly have work as one element of the scenario. All that would be likely to result would be even thinner investigations across the board and less investigations of outcomes that are clearly work-related which would be in the public interest but where the HSE has discretion to investigate or not.
....and even in past times, HSE did use that discretion to decide against investigations, particularly when resources were strained to the limit.
On the day the roofer died, I completed investigating another fatal accident that occurred the previous week. Plumber fell from the top of a stairwell whilst trying to access a roofspace.
On the Wednesday, I started the investigation after a scaffolder fell through a rooflight continuing the following day taking statements that would support the prosecution of Client, Main Contractor and scaffolding Sub-contractor.
Then on Friday morning it was another accident investigation (I can't remember the details!) before returning to the office only to be sent out again as a tripod had fallen off a roof, narrowly missing the passers by below.
Come Monday, the Area Director thought that I should be investigating another accident as it was in the "public interest" to do so, but my boss put his foot down and said that I had too many investigations on the go and he wanted these done properly, not MORE done to a lesser standard.
Take away the discretion and all that will happen is that HSE will find ways of deciding to close out more investigations without proceeding to enforcement. In terms of work-related stress and some suicides that result from such stress (in part or full) removing the discretion would probably be counter-productive.
Instead, perhaps, questions should be asked as to why HSE seems to have dropped any real interest in enforcing this aspect of work-related H&S.
Edited by user 25 May 2023 15:30:56(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified