What is reportable under RIDDOR?
[ch 10: pages 167-169]Employers, the self-employed and anyone in control of work premises must report and record particular categories of work-related accidents and “near misses” under the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995 (RIDDOR).
On 6 April 2012, a new category of “over-seven-day” injuries replaced “over-three-day” injuries under the RIDDOR regulations. The change means that employers must now report an injury that causes a person to be off work (or unable to do the full range of their normal duties) for eight consecutive days or more, starting from the day after the injury was sustained. The consecutive period includes weekends and rest days.
And in August 2012, the HSE opened a 12-week consultation on further proposals to “simplify and clarify” reporting requirements. Under the changes, self-employed people will no longer have to report injuries or illness to themselves, and employers will no longer be under a duty to report dangerous occurrences outside of high-risk sectors and activities — the proposals amended the list of reportable major injuries, now called “specified injuries” and dangerous occurrences from October 2013.
Originally the proposals included the removal of requirements to report most occupational diseases and non-fatal injuries to members of the public. However, in March 2013, the HSE board rejected these proposals. Employers are still under a duty to report injuries to members of the public and to report occupational cancers, diseases attributable to biological agents, hand-arm vibration syndrome, dermatitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, severe cramp of the arm, tendonitis and occupational asthma. Together these currently account for 90% of all ill-health RIDDOR reports to the HSE.
Unions say these latest changes further downgrade safety reporting and that companies will be less likely to take action to prevent injuries from re-occurring.
While the HSE has backed down over the reporting of occupational diseases, unions say that the new regulations which took effect on October 2013 significantly reduce the number of major injuries requiring an automatic RIDDOR report.
Construction union UCATT said these include:
• an electrical shock leading to unconsciousness, resuscitation or admittance to hospital;
• a temporary loss of eyesight;
• dislocation of the shoulder, hip, knee or spine;
• unconsciousness or acute illness caused by a biological agent its toxins or infected material;
• an acute illness requiring medical treatment; and
• loss of consciousness due to absorbing or inhaling a substance.
The proposals also downgrade the need to report injuries to members of the public unless “they are taken from the scene of the accident to hospital for treatment for that injury.”
And the types of dangerous occurrences which do not result in an accident (near misses) that must be reported have been reduced from 27 to 21.
“The reduction in the requirement to report major injuries is dangerous. Many of these type of injury are potentially life changing for those involved,” said UCATT general secretary Steve Murphy, “if companies no longer have to report them then they are less likely to take preventive measures to stop them re-occurring.”
The HSE guide Reporting accidents and incidents at work — A brief guide to RIDDOR 2013, has been updated with the changes from October 2013 and is available at: www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg453.pdf.
In summary, incidents which are reportable under RIDDOR are work-related accidents that include:
• any fatality (Regulation 6);
• specified injuries to workers (Regulation 4);
• injuries to workers which result in their incapacitation for more than seven days (Regulation 4);
• injuries to non-workers which result in them being taken directly to hospital for treatment, or specified injuries to non-workers which occur on hospital premises. (Regulation 5);
• occupational diseases (Regulation 8 and 9); and
• dangerous occurrences (Schedule 2 of RIDDOR).
There are also special reporting requirements for gas incidents.
According to the HSE, “stress” is not reportable as an occupational injury, even when accompanied by a medical certificate stating that it is work-related, because it does not relate to a single definable accident.
Injuries must be reported within 15 days (up from 10 days under the pre-April 2012 regime).
A record of all notifiable events under RIDDOR must be kept for three years. Employers remain obliged to record over-three-day injuries even though they are no longer obliged to report them and they should use this information to review their health and safety procedures.
Acceptable recording arrangements include using the accident book, keeping photocopies of completed forms for reporting purposes in a suitable file, or recording the details of each accident or reportable disease on a computer, as long as the details can be retrieved and printed out easily.
Details about the extent of the reporting obligation, including detailed guidance on what amounts to a “specified injury”, an “occupational disease”, and a “dangerous occurrence”, can be found on the HSE website at: www.hse.gov.uk/riddor/reportable-incidents.htm.
Guidance on these areas is also available from the HSE’s Reporting accidents and incidents at work — A brief guide to RIDDOR 2013, available at: http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg453.pdf.
There is an updated Information Sheet containing guidance on the reporting obligation for employers in health and social care at: www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/hsis1.pdf
For incident reporting in schools see: www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/edis1.pdf.