HC Deb 16 December 1985 vol 89 cc52-3W

Mr. Parry asked the Paymaster General (1) how many workers employed in the construction industry have been killed in accidents in England and Wales in each of the past six years;

(2) how many workers have been injured (a) seriously and (b) slightly in the construction industry in England and Wales in each of the last six years.

Mr. Peter Bottomley

The available information for the period 1979 to 1984 (provisional) is given in the table:

Reported injuries to workers in the construction industry, 1979–84* England and Wales
Type of Injury 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984*
Fatal
to employees 103 118 84 82 104 88
to self employed† 17 29 6 14 18 15
Major
to employees || || 1,446 1,666 1,847 1,973
to self-employed 27 47 57 68
Total notified to¶ HSE enforcing authorities as leading to over three day absences from work (injuries to employees only) || || 37,507 33,540 || ||

* Provisional.

† Before 1981, fatalities to the self-employed were reported on a voluntary basis only. They are therefore not strictly comparable with figures for 1981–84 which are based on reports resulting from a specific requirement under the Notification of Accidents and Dangerous Occurrences Regulation 1980 (NADOR).

‡ As defined in NADOR and reported to relevant enforcing authorities. Information before 1981 is therefore not available.

|| Not available.

¶ Those giving rise to claims for industrial injury benefit. Arrangements for industrial injury benefit changed in April 1983. From that date, only a proportion of such injuries give rise to benefit claims so that total figures are not available. Comparable figures prior to 1981 are not available for England and Wales.

Forward to