New research into the state of safety in UK workplaces has been published by Draeger Safety UK.
Key findings include:
• Despite Covid serving as a catalyst for health & safety improvements, offering ‘unprecedented’ opportunity for businesses to create a lasting health and safety legacy, UK businesses expressed concerns about a major industrial disaster amidst safety ‘brain drain’ as older, experi- enced workers leave the workplace.
• Positives: The majority of British workers (52%) feel safer at work than they did a year ago, with the top three reasons for this being:
1. ‘My business is taking safety more seriously’ – 67%
2. ‘Safety training at my workplace following Covid’ – 54%
3. ‘My company is ‘spending more money on workplace safety than before’ – 33%
Concerns: Despite the positive headlines, significant threats were highlighted, including:
• Safety ‘brain drain’ – amidst record employment flux, the research showed that the leading reason for people feeling less safe at work was the loss of older, more experienced workers from the workforce (32%).
• 37% stated that there needs to be more effort made to make sure that experience is handed down to the next generation of workers.
• Younger people (25 – 34 year olds) feel the least safe of any age group, with almost one in five (18%) saying they feel increasingly less safe at work.
• Concerns about a major industrial disaster on the scale of Buncefield or Piper Alpha, more than half (55%) of managers have concerns about such an incident happening in the next five years.
• Supply Chain issues – Four in ten (40%) managers stated that the current supply chain problems posed the most significant current threat to workplace safety, due to lack of availability of parts such as sensors and semiconductors.
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Matthew Bedford Managing Director, Draeger Safety UK said: “Our 2022 research shows that 77% of British workers feel that workplace safety is more important as a business priority than it was a year ago.
“It is clear that Covid has created an unprecedented opportunity to initiate a positive and long-term legacy when it comes to workplace safety. Not only are most employees now familiar with who their business’s health & safety lead is, but health and safety professionals have had board recognition like never before.
“Now that the impact of Covid in the workplace is reduced, there is a significant opportunity for health and safety to retain the more prominent, often board-level, position that we saw during Covid, with the potential to have a lasting positive legacy on health & safety in businesses in years to come.”