2. Incident Category - Occupational Safety
Occupational Safety
Fatal Injury (FI): is a work-related injury that results in a loss of life, with no time limit
between the date of the incident and the date of the death. Excluded in all cases are
all fatalities in transport to and from home and work, criminal acts, and
Lost Time Injury (LTI): is a work-related injury causing absence from one or more
scheduled workdays (or scheduled shifts), counting from the day after the injury occursscheduled workdays (or scheduled shifts), counting from the day after the injury occurs
to the day before the individual returns to normal work.
Medical Injury (MI): is a non-lost time work-related injury that requires any level
medical assistance from an external medical doctor, professional health care provider
or medical clinic and the injured person is permitted to return to the job for his or
First Aid Injury (FA): is a work-related injury that requires self-administered treatment
or the assistance of a first aid provider and does not require any assistance from an
external medical provider, professional health care provider or medical clinic.
Near-miss (NM): is a work-related incident that did not result in an injury but could
have resulted in an injury under different circumstances.
3. Occupational Indicators
Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR): the
number of LTI’s + FI’s per million hours worked
Severity Rate (SR): the number of lost work
days per one thousand hours worked
Medical Injury Frequency Rate (MIFR): the
number of MI’s per million hours worked
"Total Injury Frequency Rate (TIFR): the
number of FI’s, MI’s and LTI’s per million hours
worked"
11. Group 2015 ambition
We cannot be the leader we want to become if we are
not excellent in safety.
For 2015 we have set an
ambitious target at Groupambitious target at Group
level:
Lost Time Injury Frequency
Rate (LTIFR): reduction - 30%
(2015 vs 2014)
Severity Rate (SR) <= 0,5
Commitment is what will make all the difference!