Injured or ill workers should be empowered to play an active role in their own recovery and return to work through both practical and psychological support, according to two new Safe Work Australia (SWA) reports.|Injured or ill workers should be empowered to play an active role in their own recovery and return to work through both practical and psychological support, according to two new Safe Work Australia (SWA) reports.
Injured or ill workers should be empowered to play an active role in their own recovery and return to work through both practical and psychological support, according to two new Safe Work Australia (SWA) reports.
The reports encourage employers to provide their injured workers with greater access to workplace arrangements like flexible schedules, task modifications, graded returns or role changes.
Safe Work Australia published the two research reports by Griffith University under the National Return to Work Strategy 2020-2030:
SWA say the reports provide an evidence base and recommendations on how to meaningfully support workers in their recovery and return to work through building positive workplace cultures and minimising the adverse impacts of stigma and other psychological responses to injury on workers.
The 2018 National Return to Work Survey results showed that: