Hi Ian
Not wanting to second guess what you might do with this data but your profile indicates that you are an IOSH Member and hence (at least) one element of the "Competency Framework" is relevant:
Proficiency with incident cost analysis
As part of incident investigation OSH professionals must undertake a cost analysis to understand the impact of the incident on the business. The cost analysis could include activities associated with the circumstances of the incident but also the impact on the business from a reputational point of view.
All else being equal the official socio-economic cost aka Value for Preventing a Fatality (VPF) in the UK is currently just over £2m. [Department for Transport].
However, not all people are necessarily of equal value.
Suppose two people aged 20 and 60 are in a car each sustaining a multiple fracture to their leg. The Value for Preventing that severity of Injury (VPI) is about £200,000.
However, all else being equal, the NHS will treat the younger person as more valuable. Spending say £50k on a 20 year old will get far more Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) than spending the same sum on the 60 year old. This is entirely rational.
But somewhat contrastingly the HSE says that someone who is old and frail is worth more than a fit person on the street.
So, in R2P2 HSE defines the level at which a risk can be generally considered "Broadly Acceptable" setting the level at an Indidividual Risks of one in a million per annum (IR = 10-6) but pointing out that for the purposes of Land Use Planning it sets a consulation boundary for those who are vulnerable at 3 in 10 million (IR = 3 x 10-7)
Ergo in HSE's eyes the wheelchair user in a care home is three times as valuable as the fit person on the street or the worker.
This, in part reflects HSE's general assumption that those at work "tolerate" some risk (however much it may seem that a worker may not have much choice in the matter), whereas those such as the public who have risk thrust upon them need more protection.
However, you can take these numbers games into how you collate your statistics as well.
You might decide NOT to count anyone who is killed or injured if they are NOT at work - e.g. a member of the public impacted by how your work happens. On that basis your statistics might count the cost of that impact as NIL.
Which brings us to those who are at work.
There are two broad approaches.
1. You count everyone or at the very least those in your supply chain who are close at hand.
2. You only count your direct employees. This USUALLY makes the statistics look MUCH better, partly as the higher risk work tends to be sub-contracted in many, possibly most UK organisations. So actual numbers of accidents go down, but perhaps more importantly in terms of perception, injury rates are lower - it's usually the rates that get the most reporting.
Coming back to No 1, probably the single greatest reason why UK accident rates have declined so much at the macro level since the end of World War II has been outsourcing to foreign countries.
So, the question is whether you should be making attempts to find out how many accidents (incuding those 365 days DAWs) are happening in places far away where your equipment and components are being made.
....followed by better ways of predicting the occupational ill health that may not present for 5,10 or 30 years at home - and abroad?
Edited by user 04 November 2022 14:47:39(UTC)
| Reason: Typed a d instead of an s, so probably used wrong finger.