Lost limbs bring warning
Stats show more than 150 limbs or digits were lost in workplace incidents in Victoria last year.
In 2022, WorkSafe Victoria accepted 137 claims for workplace amputation injuries, with more than 150 body parts amputated, including at least 127 fingers or thumbs.
Digits caught or crushed in machinery or severed while using a saw accounted for about one third of all amputation claims.
Manufacturing was the most dangerous industry when it came to amputations, accounting for 45 per cent of claims. Construction made up 15 per cent.
Labourers were most at risk, with 51 accepted claims in 2022, followed by tradies (37) and production and transport workers (31).
WorkSafe Executive Director of Health and Safety Narelle Beer says employers need to do more to ensure workers are kept safe from the risk of traumatic injuries due to unsafe work practises.
In 2022, fines and court costs totalling $256,094 were imposed by the courts against companies in eight WorkSafe prosecutions after workers sustained amputations.
Charges against nine other Victorian employers for alleged breaches of the Occupational Health and Safety Act that resulted in amputation injuries remain before the courts and 24 matters involving amputations are currently being investigated by WorkSafe.
In June, a Heidelberg cheese factory was fined $50,000 after two workers lost fingers to the revolving blades of a blender in separate incidents in 2019. The court heard that it was reasonably practicable for Australian Dairy Packaging Pty Ltd to have a lockout/tagout procedure to prevent the blender being switched on during cleaning.
Also in June, Heyfield timber manufacturer Australian Sustainable Hardwoods Pty Ltd was fined $30,000 after a worker lost four toes when his foot became stuck in a conveyor motor's chain and sprocket as he attempted to put a timber board onto a conveyor belt. The court heard that there was an absence of guarding on the motor.
In August, a Dandenong South steel manufacturer committed to a $210,000 enforceable undertaking after a 2019 incident where a worker had three fingers partially amputated when they were caught between rollers as he fed a metal bar through a machine used to bend steel.