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Lost Time Injury and Illness

Global Reporting Initiative Sustainability Reporting Guidelines
Health and Safety
Lost Time Injury and Illness
Injury and Illness without Loss of Time
Contract Manufacturers Injury and Illness

Our primary injury and illness measure is the Lost Time Injury and Illness rate (the number of injuries and illnesses that result in one or more lost work days per 100,000 hours worked). In 2001 we set a target to reduce this rate by 15% per year through 2005. From 2001 to 2002, the rate declined from 0.43 to 0.34, a reduction of 21%, and from 2002 to 2003 it declined to 0.30, an additional 12%. Although the improvement was not uniform for the two years and we missed our target for 2003, if we had improved exactly 15% per year from 2001 we would have achieved only a rate of .31 in 2003.

Charts:



Lost Time Injury and Illness Rate
Chart: Lost Time Injury and Illness Rate The lost time injury rate per 100,000 hours worked was 0.28 and the lost time illness rate was 0.02 based on 567 lost time injuries and 46 lost time illnesses. There were also 49 cases of mental ill health with lost time that are not included in the rate. The rate declined by 21% from 2001 to 2002 and a further 12% from 2002 to 2003 for an overall improvement from 2001 to 2003 of 30%.


Lost Time Injury and Illness Rate by Business
Chart: Lost Time Injury and Illness Rate by Business

The trend is consistently improving in all business units except in the one that already has the lowest rate for all three years, Regional Pharmaceutical Supply. The Biologicals business unit is improving but has the highest rate of lost time injuries and illnesses.



Categories of Lost Time Injury

Chart: Categories of Lost Time Injury

Categories of Lost Time Illness
Chart: Categories of Lost Time Illness

The three leading types of lost time injuries are slips trips and falls followed by over-exertion strain injuries and motor vehicle accidents. This pattern is consistent with prior years. The leading type of lost time illness continues to be mental ill health, which we do not include in the calculation of the overall lost time injury and illness rate. The second most frequent type of lost time illness is musculoskeletal which is primarily repetitive strain injury.



Calendar Days Lost Rate
Chart: Calendar Days Lost Rate

The Lost Calendar Day rate is the number of calendar days that employees could not work because of work-related injuries and illnesses per 100,000 hours worked. This provides one measure of the severity of illnesses and injuries but it is important to remember that the rate can vary for other reasons. Medical and disability management practices can vary in different parts of the world and there are some illnesses such as hearing loss and sensitisation that can result in permanent disability without resulting in lost time. These and other reasons can both inflate and deflate the lost calendar day rate.


There were 12,344 lost days due to injury and 1,377 lost days due to illness in 2003 excluding work related mental illness. Injuries from motor vehicle accidents caused the greatest number of lost days from injury at 4,004, 32% of the total. Musculoskeletal illness, generally caused by cumulative trauma, was the leading cause of lost days from illness accounting for 1,094, 79% of the lost days excluding work related mental illness. Illnesses resulting in permanent disability, such as noise induced hearing loss, sensitisations, and some cases of cancer and musculoskeletal illness also merit special preventive focus. Approximately nine percent of 2003 illnesses resulted in permanent disabilities.
 
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