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The impact of the coronavirus pandemic on the interpretation of Health and Safety Statistics 2020/21

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UK. Health and Safety Executive

HSE - London

2021

29 p.

epidemic disease ; occupational disease ; occupational accidents ; notification of accidents and diseases

United Kingdom

Technical report

December 2021

Occupational accidents and diseases

https://www.hse.gov.uk/

English

Statistics

"It is noted that the various statistics within the 2021 publication have to a greater or lesser extent been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. The HSE points out that while every endeavour has been made during the pandemic to collect and update data on as complete and comparable basis as possible, important differences with earlier years' data remain. The report considers the different impacts of the pandemic on health and safety statistics and the approaches taken to ensure that data quality is maintained.
The discontinuities introduced by the coronavirus pandemic mean that for many of the HSE statistics (particularly those relating to injury and shorter latency ill health conditions), it is not possible to make meaningful statistical assessments of trend across the most recent years. In the 2021 statistical commentaries, the regulator has instead presented trends prior to the pandemic period and commented on whether there has been any change in the most recent year compared to the pre-coronavirus level.
Injury incidence rates for 2020/21 have been produced on the same basis as in previous years, namely as rate of injury per 100,000 workers. However, in 2020/21 these rates will be an under-estimate relative to the population at risk, says the report. This is since the employment estimates include people who were on furlough, thus inflating the size of the at-risk population. As some industries were more affected by furlough than others, this impact is variable across different groups.
Estimates of the rate of self-reported work-related ill health in 2020/21 are more broadly comparable, methodologically speaking, with estimates from earlier years. As you don't need to be at work to suffer a work-related illness, the rate calculation assumes a slightly wider definition of number of workers, namely anyone who has worked in the last 12 months, regardless of whether for the full year. Furlough therefore doesn't impact on these rates in the same way as injury rates...."

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