A major survey of Australian workers has found almost 80 per cent have suffered physical or mental injuries as a result of their work, and that psychological injuries continue to be overlooked.
A major survey of Australian workers has found almost 80 per cent have suffered physical or mental injuries as a result of their work, and that psychological injuries continue to be overlooked.
In fact, more than 60 per cent of respondents to the survey had experienced poor mental health because of unaddressed psychological hazards in their workplace.
The ACTU surveyed more than 26,000 working people on their experiences of workplace health and safety in the past 12 months.
Areas surveyed included exposure to traumatic events – like the death of a colleague, occupational violence, hazardous conditions, poor management, and remote or isolated work.
The survey found that psychological workplace hazards are under-regulated and consequently under-recognised but just as dangerous as physical ones.
It also revealed that while employers may be listening to worker’s safety concerns, they may not be acting on them.
ACTU assistant secretary Liam O’Brien said most workers were “aware of serious threats to their physical and mental health which are being tolerated or ignored by their employers.”
“Workers’ responses demonstrate a widespread belief that employers will politely listen to complaints about unsafe work conditions. However workers do not believe that employers either know what to do or are willing to take action on serious threats to their safety,” the report reads.
More than half of survey respondents were aware of an existing, unresolved issue in their workplace which could result in serious injury or illness to a coworker or themselves.
“These findings suggest a level of box-ticking by employers. Willing to meet the most basic requirements by taking meetings with staff and appearing open to complaints, but not willing to make the changes in workplaces which will actually prevent further injuries or deaths.”
On mental health, the ACTU say the manner in which work is structured and organised presents persistent psychological and physical hazards.
“Occupational violence, workplace stress, hostile work environments, exposure to trauma and other ongoing issues in many workplaces can – and in the experience of the workers who responded to our survey, do – lead to physical injuries and mental health issues.”
In 2018, the Government commissioned a report into model work health and safety legislation resulting in the Boland review, which made 34 recommendations to strengthen work health and safety laws (see related article).
The ACTU wants all recommendations to be implemented across all states and territories.
“We call for urgent action to prevent workplace deaths and injuries and illness as a result of work. All 34 recommendations of the Government’s own sweeping review – the Boland Review – must be implemented.”