Safety and Health Add Value To Your Business
If you could save money, improve productivity, and increase employee morale, would you?
Businesses spend $170 billion a year on costs associated with occupational injuries and illnesses -- expenditures that come
straight out of company profits. But workplaces that establish safety and health management systems can reduce their injury
and illness costs by 20 to 40 percent. In today's business environment, these costs can be the difference between operating in
the black and running in the red.
Injuries and illnesses increase workers' compensation and retraining costs, absenteeism, and faulty product. They also decrease
productivity, morale, and profits. Businesses operate more efficiently when they implement effective safety and health
management systems. A Fortune Five company increased productivity by 13 percent, while a small, 50-person plant decreased
faulty product and saved more than $265,000 with a strong safety and health program.
OSHA can help take the guesswork out of workplace safety and health by providing information and expertise to help
businesses tailor solutions to meet their needs.
To Your Workplace
Safe workplaces provide the consistency and reliability needed to build a community and grow a business. Workplaces with
active safety and health leadership have fewer injuries, are often rated “better places to work,” and have more satisfied, more
productive employees. These employees return to work more quickly after an injury or illness and produce higher-quality
products and services. Each year, OSHA works with thousands of companies to help create better workplaces, providing
assessments and help in implementing safety and health management systems.
Safe environments improve employee morale, which often leads to increased productivity and better service. Lost productivity
from injuries and illnesses costs companies $60 billion each year. OSHA has committed to reducing the rate of lost production
by 2 percent per year, so that companies focused on safety and health can also enjoy a healthy bottom line.
To Your Life
When it comes to safe and healthful workplaces, OSHA helps to join employers and employees as partners for life. Since 1970,
more than 75,000 lives have been saved and millions of injuries and illnesses have been prevented through effective
occupational safety and health management systems.
Millions of Americans work hard every day so they can build a better life for their families. OSHA helps to make sure that they
return to their families in the same condition they began their day. Every injury prevented is a person kept whole; every life
saved is a family preserved intact.
Safe workplaces not only save life, they promote successful, vibrant lives. Workers who suffer a disabling injury can lose 40
percent of their income over five years. Families can lose even more because of the increased stress, conflict, and divorce
associated with occupational injury and illness. On the other hand, safe workplaces provide an environment for healthy workers
whose jobs become vehicles for making a life -- not just a living.
Preventing Injuries and Illnesses Together
OSHA is committed to the design and implemention of safety and health systems that protect workers and promote successful
business practices. OSHA offers a variety of tools, services, and programs to fit the needs of employers, employees, and safety
and health professionals.
Businesses that partner with OSHA through the Voluntary Protection Programs (VPP) have 50 percent fewer lost workday
injuries and illnesses than the average for their industry and incidence rates 50 percent below the national average. VPP
companies have saved more than $1 billion since 1982.
Small employers participating in the Safety and Health Achievement Recognition Program (SHARP) have also saved their
companies and their employees significant money and hardship. OSHA's Strategic Partnerships and Alliances benefit employers
and employees in many industries by encouraging, assisting, and recognizing efforts to promote workplace safety and health.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has been helping save lives, prevent injuries, and protect the safety and
health of America's workforce for more than 30 years. Since 1970, occupational fatalities have been cut in half and injuries and
illnesses have been reduced by 40 percent.
OSHA continues to help reduce injuries, illnesses, and fatalities through extensive outreach, education, and compliance
assistance efforts that complement strong, fair, and effective enforcement of safety and health regulations. OSHA's leadership in
advancing safety and health is supported by an expanding array of programs that add value to business, workplace, and life.
OSHA's national and regional offices, together with state plan organizations, develop partnerships, alliances, and consultation
programs to help companies implement safety and health management systems.