Steps to Reduce Workplace Injuries

Managing Business Risks

Injuries to employees can be devastating for businesses, especially small businesses with fewer employees available to take on new roles when an injured worker is on leave. While workers compensation insurance will help pay medical costs and replace an injured employee’s lost income, your business will have to absorb costs associated with reduced productivity, overtime, training replacements, and so on.

The best way to minimize the hidden costs of workplace injuries and related insurance costs is to prevent accidents from happening in the first place. Follow the steps below and consider developing a formal, comprehensive workplace safety program to help reduce the risk of injury.

  • Engage Management and Employees – Businesses are most successful improving workplace safety when leadership and employees collaborate. Responsibility for workplace safety should be part of everyone’s job, and specific employees and managers should be tasked with implementing, maintaining, and improving workplace safety program components.
  • Analyze Your Workplace and Operations – Evaluate your business from top to bottom. Review your equipment as well as all workplace activities. As part of your evaluation, talk to your employees to learn their safety concerns. Whenever you add new operations, equipment or facilities to your business, analyze these for risks as well.
  • Mitigate Hazards – Simply identifying and being aware of hazardous practices, equipment and infrastructure is not enough. When hazards are identified, you should seek to remove or control them by replacing or fixing equipment, adding new safety measures or changing workplace operations.
  • Implement Training – Train employees about workplace safety and how to identify hazards. Include workplace safety training as part of employee on-boarding and offer refresher training on a regular basis. In addition to injury prevention training, you may want to include first-aid training so that your workforce can respond effectively if an accident does occur.
  • Review, Respond and Improve – Promoting workplace safety is an ongoing process. You should review and improve your program – especially in response to accidents or “near misses.” Employees should always be encouraged to report newly identified hazards or workplace incidents so that you can respond appropriately.

Workplace safety programs provide additional benefits beyond preventing accidents. These programs have been found to increase employee morale, retention, and productivity.

 

Beyond Prevention: Workers Compensation Insurance

Unfortunately, accidents and injuries do happen. Following the steps above can help reduce workplace injuries, but the risk cannot be absolutely eliminated. To help employees – and your business – recover from a workplace injury, your company will need workers compensation insurance. Workers compensation insurance requirements for employers vary from state to state, and knowing the requirements for your state is essential to protecting your business.

 

What Workers Compensation Covers

A workers compensation insurance claim can be filed if an employee is injured at your workplace or while on the job at another location. A claim can also be filed if a worker is injured in a vehicle accident while on business. Costs are also covered for employees that develop work-related illnesses. Your workers compensation insurance will cover:

  • Income Benefits – Replaces a portion of an employee’s salary when work is missed.
  • Medical and Rehabilitation Costs – Pays necessary medical care to treat work-related injuries or illness.
  • Funeral Expenses – In the case of death, funeral and related expenses such as burial or cremation are covered.
  • Death Benefits – Paid to a surviving spouse and dependents.

Each state has different laws governing the amount and duration of lost income benefits, the provision of medical and rehabilitation services, and how the system is administered. For example, in most states there are regulations that cover whether the worker or employer can choose the doctor who treats the injuries and how disputes about benefits are resolved.

 

What Isn’t Covered

While workers compensation covers costs directly tied to an injured employee, it does not cover the hidden costs associated with the loss of an employee, including:

  • Business interruption losses.
  • Hiring and training of employees.
  • Overtime costs.

Workers compensation must be purchased as a stand-alone policy, approved by the state in which you do business. This type of coverage is not included in Commercial Package Policies (CPPs) or Business Owners Policies (BOPs).

 

Related Links

Steps to Reduce Workplace Injuries

 

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