The Borneo Post

‘Awareness campaign necessary to report workplace accidents’

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KUALA LUMPUR: A nationwide awareness campaign is necessary to report every workplace accident, especially in the constructi­on sector, says National Institute of Occupation­al Safety and Health ( NIOSH) chairman Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye.

He said government agencies such as NIOSH and the Department of Occupation­al Safety and Health ( DOSH) required complete and accurate data to help formulate strategies and training programmes to help reduce industrial accidents.

“Although it is compulsory for employers to report such cases under the Occupation­al Safety and Health Act ( OSHA) 1994, many employers are still unaware of this,” he said in a statement

Although it is compulsory for employers to report such cases under the Occupation­al Safety and Health Act (OSHA) 1994, many employers are still unaware of this. Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye, National Institute of Occupation­al Safety and Health (NIOSH) chairman

here yesterday.

Section 51 of OSHA and regulation 13 of the Occupation­al Safety and Health Regulation­s 2004 prescribes penalties for failure to report and keep records of workplace accidents.

The penalties for a conviction is fine not exceeding RM10,000 or a maximum one-year jail term or both.

Lee also said on average, the number of accidents reported to the Social Security Organisati­on was 10 times higher that those reported to DOSH annually.

A study entitled ‘ Malaysian Constructi­on Industry: Trends of Occupation­al Accidents from 2006 to 2015’ published in the Journal of Occupation­al Safety and Health 2016 said the number of cases investigat­ed by DOSH was low.

“According to DOSH statistics, the constructi­on sector recorded the highest total fatalities caused by occupation­al accidents from 2007 to last year, with 751 deaths,” said the NIOSH chairman. — Bernama

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