Site icon ProTrainings Wiki

RIDDOR

RIDDOR

RIDDOR stands for Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013

RIDDOR requires deaths and injuries to be reported only when:

The HSE defines an ‘accident’ as:

In relation to RIDDOR, an accident is a separate, identifiable, unintended incident, which causes physical injury. This specifically includes acts of non-consensual violence against people at work.

Injuries themselves, eg ‘feeling a sharp twinge’, are not accidents. There must be an identifiable external event that causes the injury, eg a falling object striking someone. Cumulative exposures to hazards, which eventually cause injury (eg repetitive lifting), are not classed as ‘accidents’ under RIDDOR.

The HSE defines ‘work-related’ as:

RIDDOR only requires you to report accidents if they happen ‘out of or in connection with work’. The fact that there is an accident at work premises does not, in itself, mean that the accident is work-related – the work activity itself must contribute to the accident. An accident is ‘work-related’ if any of the following played a significant role:

The HSE defines ‘reportable’ injuries as:

The following injuries are reportable under RIDDOR when they result from a work-related accident:

More details about RIDDOR is available on the HSE website.

Exit mobile version