Accidents are never nice. And, no matter how many measures you have in place to prevent them, they still happen.
Certain specified accidents like fractures, amputations and loss of consciousness, to name just a few must be reported under the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 (RIDDOR). For a comprehensive list of what needs to be reported,head here.
Although we hope you never find yourself needing to report one, if you do, as youll soon see, its really not that bad.
Your six-step guide to report accidents
- The person
First and foremost, the person/people reporting accidents must becompetentto do so. By this, we mean someone whos sufficiently trained, has relevant knowledge and experience and is proactive, willing and capable with their approach toHealth Safety.
- Log the accident
Next, you need to log the accident in your accident book if you dont have one, you need one. If youre a Citation client, youll have a template available inAtlasor a hard copy made available to you.
Within your accident book, you should record details like:
- The name, gender, date of birth and job title of the injured party;
- The date the accident happened;
- The date the accident was reported;
- The name and job title of the person logging the accident;
- Whether or the not the injured party is an expectant mother; and
- Whether or not the injured party is a minor.
You should update your accident book with these details as soon as is reasonably possible after the accident has occurred.
- Formal investigation
Stage three is a formal investigation it sounds more daunting than it is. The main components of your inquiry are gathering witness statements, taking pictures of the area the accident happened, and drawing out a detailed plan of what actually went on.
- Is it reportable?
Steps two and three should be followed regardless of if the accident is reportable under RIDDOR. Step four is all about determining whether youraccident reportingneeds to be escalated to the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
If youre a Citation client, you should give ouradvice linea call. Our Health Safety experts will tell you if it needs to be reported under RIDDOR and, if it does, well let you know how to best approach the HSE.
If youre not yet part of the Citation team, you need to thoroughly research whether the nature of the accident is reportable weve taken a good lookhere, and the HSE is packed with useful information too.
Its really important to get this part right. If its not a RIDDOR reportable accident and you log it with the HSE anyway, you might instigate an unnecessary investigation into your business.
- Fill in your forms
If your accidentisreportable, the penultimate step involves completing an online form thatll be stored in the HSEs RIDDOR database. There are seven reports to choose from:
- Report of an injury
- Report of a dangerous occurrence
- Report of an injury offshore
- Report of a dangerous occurrence offshore
- Report of a case of disease
- Report of the flammable gas incident
- Report of a dangerous gas fitting.
You can access each of the online formshere.
When it comes to filling in your form, prioritise which reporting option is most important. Although more than one might be relevant, RIDDOR works on the basis of one report per event, rather than one per reportable issue.
- Review your risk assessments
Its always good practice to review relevant risk assessments and internal policies after an accident or near accident has taken place. Why? So that you can identify any potential gaps and prevent something similar from happening again down the line.
Keeping it simple
Our experts arent about making Health Safety harder than it needs to be. Were here to keep things simple and take the stress out of the day-to-day.
With everything from identifying your competent person and running a formal investigation, to understanding RIDDOR requirements and runningrisk assessments, were here to help every single step of the way.





