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Injury and illness costs business tens of thousands of lose work years – study

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Australia loses 41,194 work years annually due to work-related injury, disease and mental health conditions, a new measure of the national burden of workplace injury and illness has found.

This equals more than 41,000 lost jobs.

The Monash University team developed a new ‘Working Years Lost’ metric to measure the national burden of work-based injury, illness and disease resulting in compensation claims.

Published in the Medical Journal of Australia, the study aimed to quantify the national burden of working time lost to compensable occupational injury and disease and how working time lost is distributed across age, sex, injury and disease.

Professor Alex Collie from Monash University’s School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine said it was the first time such figures had been collated.

Professor Collie said: “Normally we track injury and disease at work by counting the number of people making compensation claims or the amount of time they spend off work.

“This new measure combines those two concepts and presents it as something more meaningful, which can be summarised as the number of people off work for a full year.”

Professor Collie said the impact of some types of injury and disease were more accurately represented in the new metric.

“For instance, mental health conditions have a much higher percentage of working years lost than of workers’ compensation claims.

“This is because we take the long time off work for each mental health claim into account, whereas simply counting claims does not do this.”

The national study covered people with accepted workers’ compensation claims and receiving wage replacement benefits for time off work, lodged between July 2012 and June 2017.

Male workers incurred 25,367 (61.6 per cent) WYL while female workers accounted for 15,827 (38.4 per cent).

A total of 21,763 WYL (52.8 per cent) were from workers aged over 45 years, despite these workers accounting for 66,742 (44.1 per cent) accepted claims.

Picture: Professor Alex Collie



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