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Click
on
the
relevant
link
on
the
left
and
the
information
will
appear
here.
What
is
RIDDOR
'95?
RIDDOR
'95
means
the
Reporting
of
Injuries,
Diseases
and
Dangerous
Occurrences
Regulations
1995,
which
came
into
force
on
1
April
1996.
RIDDOR
'95
requires
the
reporting
of
work-related
accidents,
diseases
and
dangerous
occurrences.
It
applies
to
all
work
activities,
but
not
to
all
incidents.
End
of
Section
Why
should
I
report?
Reporting
accidents
and
ill
health
at
work
is
a
legal
requirement.
The
information
enables
the
enforcing
authorities
to
identify
where
and
how
risks
arise
and
to
investigate
serious
accidents.
The
enforcing
authorities
can
then
help
and
advise
you
on
preventive
action
to
reduce
injury,
ill
health
and
accidental
loss
-
much
of
which
is
uninsurable.
End
of
Section
Do
the
Regulations
affect
me?
If
you
are
an
employer,
self-employed
or
in
control
of
work
premises
you
will
have
duties
under
the
Regulations.
End
of
Section
What
do
I
need
to
do?
Not
very
much!
-
For
most
businesses
a
reportable
accident,
dangerous
occurrence
or
case
of
disease
is
a
comparatively
rare
event.
End
of
Section
When
do
I
need
to
act?
You
need
to
report:
·
deaths
·
major
injuries
·
accidents
resulting
in
over
3
day
injury
·
diseases
·
dangerous
occurrences
.
gas
incidents
Death
or
major
injury
If
there
is
an
accident
connected
with
work
and:
your
employee,
or
a
self-employed
person
working
on
your
premises
is
killed
or
suffers
a
major
injury
(including
as
a
result
of
physical
violence);
or
a
member
of
the
public
is
killed
or
taken
to
hospital;
you
must
notify
the
enforcing
authority
without
delay.
You
can
either
telephone
or
complete
the
appropriate
form
on
this
website.
Reportable
major
injuries
are:
·
fracture
other
than
to
fingers,
thumbs
or
toes;
·
amputation;
·
dislocation
of
the
shoulder,
hip,
knee
or
spine;
·
loss
of
sight
(temporary
or
permanent);
·
chemical
or
hot
metal
burn
to
the
eye
or
any
penetrating
injury
to
the
eye;
·
injury
resulting
from
an
electric
shock
or
electrical
burn
leading
to
unconsciousness
or
requiring
resuscitation
or
admittance
to
hospital
for
more
than
24
hours;
·
any
other
injury:
leading
to
hypothermia,
heat-induced
illness
or
unconsciousness;
or
requiring
resuscitation;
or
requiring
admittance
to
hospital
for
more
than
24
hours;
·
unconsciousness
caused
by
asphyxia
or
exposure
to
harmful
substance
or
biological
agent;
·
acute
illness
requiring
medical
treatment,
or
loss
of
consciousness
arising
from
absorption
of
any
substance
by
inhalation,
ingestion
or
through
the
skin;
·
acute
illness
requiring
medical
treatment
where
there
is
reason
to
believe
that
this
resulted
from
exposure
to
a
biological
agent
or
its
toxins
or
infected
material.
Over-three-day
injury
If
there
is
an
accident
connected
with
work
(including
an
act
of
physical
violence)
and
your
employee,
or
a
self-employed
person
working
on
your
premises,
suffers
an
over-three-day
injury
you
must
report
it
to
the
enforcing
authority
within
ten
days.
An
over-3-day
injury
is
one
which
is
not
"major"
but
results
in
the
injured
person
being
away
from
work
OR
unable
to
do
their
full
range
of
their
normal
duties
for
more
than
three
days.
Disease
If
a
doctor
notifies
you
that
your
employee
suffers
from
a
reportable
work-related
disease
then
you
must
report
it
to
the
enforcing
authority.
Reportable
diseases
include:
·
certain
poisonings;
·
some
skin
diseases
such
as
occupational
dermatitis,
skin
cancer,
chrome
ulcer,
oil
folliculitis/acne;
·
lung
diseases
including:
occupational
asthma,
farmer's
lung,
pneumoconiosis,
asbestosis,
mesothelioma;
·
infections
such
as:
leptospirosis;
hepatitis;
tuberculosis;
anthrax;
legionellosis
and
tetanus;
·
other
conditions
such
as:
occupational
cancer;
certain
musculoskeletal
disorders;
decompression
illness
and
hand-arm
vibration
syndrome.
Click
here
for
a
full
list
of
reportable
diseases.
Dangerous
occurrence
If
something
happens
which
does
not
result
in
a
reportable
injury,
but
which
clearly
could
have
done,
then
it
may
be
a
dangerous
occurrence
which
must
be
reported
immediately
(eg
by
telephone
or
completing
a
form
on
this
web
site).
Reportable
dangerous
occurrences
are:
1.
collapse,
overturning
or
failure
of
load-bearing
parts
of
lifts
and
lifting
equipment;
2.
explosion,
collapse
or
bursting
of
any
closed
vessel
or
associated
pipework;
3.
failure
of
any
freight
container
in
any
of
its
load-bearing
parts;
4.
plant
or
equipment
coming
into
contact
with
overhead
power
lines;
5.
electrical
short
circuit
or
overload
causing
fire
or
explosion;
6.
any
unintentional
explosion,
misfire,
failure
of
demolition
to
cause
the
intended
collapse,
projection
of
material
beyond
a
site
boundary,
injury
caused
by
an
explosion;
7.
accidental
release
of
a
biological
agent
likely
to
cause
severe
human
illness;
8.
failure
of
industrial
radiography
or
irradiation
equipment
to
de-energise
or
return
to
its
safe
position
after
the
intended
exposure
period;
9.
malfunction
of
breathing
apparatus
while
in
use
or
during
testing
immediately
before
use;
10.
failure
or
endangering
of
diving
equipment,
the
trapping
of
a
diver,
an
explosion
near
a
diver,
or
an
uncontrolled
ascent;
11.
collapse
or
partial
collapse
of
a
scaffold
over
five
metres
high,
or
erected
near
water
where
there
could
be
a
risk
of
drowning
after
a
fall;
12.
unintended
collision
of
a
train
with
any
vehicle;
13.
dangerous
occurrence
at
a
well
(other
than
a
water
well);
14.
dangerous
occurrence
at
a
pipeline;
15.
failure
of
any
load-bearing
fairground
equipment,
or
derailment
or
unintended
collision
of
cars
or
trains;
16.
a
road
tanker
carrying
a
dangerous
substance
overturns,
suffers
serious
damage,
catches
fire
or
the
substance
is
released;
17.
a
dangerous
substance
being
conveyed
by
road
is
involved
in
a
fire
or
released;
18.
The
following
dangerous
occurrences
are
reportable
except
in
relation
to
offshore
workplaces:
unintended
collapse
of:
any
building
or
structure
under
construction,
alteration
or
demolition
where
over
five
tonnes
of
material
falls;
a
wall
or
floor
in
a
place
of
work;
any
false-work;
19.
explosion
or
fire
causing
suspension
of
normal
work
for
over
24
hours;
20.
sudden,
uncontrolled
release
in
a
building
of:
100
kg
or
more
of
flammable
liquid;
10
kg
of
flammable
liquid
above
its
boiling
point;
10
kg
or
more
of
flammable
gas;
or
of
500
kg
of
these
substances
if
the
release
is
in
the
open
air;
21.
accidental
release
of
any
substance
which
may
damage
health.
Note:
additional
categories
of
dangerous
occurrences
apply
to
mines,
quarries,
relevant
transport
systems
(railways
etc)
and
offshore
workplaces
Gas Incidents
If you are a distributor, filler, importer or supplier of flammable gas and
you learn, either directly or indirectly that someone has died or suffered
a major a 'major injury' in connection with the gas you distributed,
filled, imported or supplied, then this must be reported immediately. See
'Report an Incident - Report of a Flammable Gas Incident'
If you are an installer of gas appliances registered with the Council for
Registered Installers (CORGI), you must provide details (using form F2508G2
- Report of a Dangerous Gas Fitting) of any gas appliances or fittings that
you consider to be dangerous, to such an extent that people could die or
suffer a 'major injury', because the design, construction, installation,
modification or servicing could result in:
(a) an accidental leakage of gas;
(b) inadequate combustion of gas or ;
(c) inadequate removal of products of the combustion of gas.
End
of
Section
I'm
self-employed.
What
do
I
need
to
do?
If
you
are
working
in
someone
else's
premises
and
suffer
either
a
major
injury
or
an
injury
which
means
you
cannot
do
your
normal
work
for
more
than
three
days,
then
they
will
be
responsible
for
reporting,
so,
where
possible,
you
should
make
sure
they
know
about
it.
If
you
or
a
member
of
the
public
is
injured
while
you
are
working
on
your
own
premises,
if
there
is
a
dangerous
occurrence
there,
or
if
a
doctor
tells
you
you
have
a
work-related
disease
or
condition,
then
you
need
to
report
it.
However,
as
a
self-employed
person
you
don't
need
to
notify
immediately
if
you
suffer
a
major
injury
on
your
own
premises.
Either
you
or
someone
acting
for
you
should
report
it
within
10
days.
End
of
Section
Who
do
I
report
to?
All
accidents,
diseases
and
dangerous
occurrences
may
be
reported
to
the
Incident
Contact
Centre.
The
Contact
Centre
was
established
on
1st
April
2001
as
a
single
point
of
contact
for
receiving
all
incidents
in
the
UK.
You
can
report
incidents
by
any
of
the
following
routes:
·
Telephone
-
0845
3009923
·
Internet
-
by
completing
the
relevant
form
on
this
site
·
Form
--
by
completing
the
relevant
hard
copy
form
and
sending:
By
Facsimile
-
0845
3009924
By
post
to:
Incident
Contact
Centre
Caerphilly
Business
Park
Caerphilly
CF83
3GG
The
Incident
Contact
Centre
will
forward
details
of
incidents
to
the
relevant
enforcing
authority,
which
is
the
environmental
health
department
of
your
local
authority
if
your
business
is:
·
office-based;
·
retail
or
wholesale;
·
warehousing;
·
hotel
and
catering;
·
sports
or
leisure;
·
residential
accommodation,
excluding
nursing
homes,
·
concerned
with
places
of
worship
·
pre-school
child
care
·
mobile
vending
For
all
other
types
of
business
it
will
be
the
area
office
of
the
Health
and
Safety
Executive.
End
of
Section
Keeping
records
You
must
keep
a
record
of
any
reportable
injury,
disease
or
dangerous
occurrence.
This
must
include
the
date
and
method
of
reporting;
the
date,
time
and
place
of
the
event,
personal
details
of
those
involved
and
a
brief
description
of
the
nature
of
the
event
or
disease.
You
can
keep
the
record
in
any
form
you
wish.
End
of
Section
Guidance
on
keeping
records
You
could,
for
example,
choose
to
keep
your
records
by:
keeping
copies
of
report
forms
in
a
file;
recording
the
details
on
a
computer;
maintaining
a
written
log.
If
you
choose
to
report
the
incident
by
telephone
or
through
this
web
site,
the
Incident
Contact
Centre
will
post
you
a
copy
of
the
record
held
within
the
database.
You
will
be
able
to
request
amendments
to
the
record
if
you
feel
the
report
is
not
fully
accurate.
End
of
Section
Further
information
on
RIDDOR
'95
can
be
obtained
from:
A
Guide
to
the
reporting
of
Injuries,
Diseases,
and
Dangerous
Occurrences
Regulations
1995.
(L73)
ISBN
0-7176-1012-8.
Available
from
HSE
Books,
PO
Box
1999,
Sudbury,
Suffolk
CO10
6FS
Tel:
01787
881165
Fax:
01787
313995
Telephone
enquiries
to
HSE
Infoline
-
telephone
0870
1545500
Email
enquiries
to
HSE
Information
Centre:
hseinformationservices@natbrit.com
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