Falls in the Workplace

About Falls in the Workplace

Key points

  • Falls can happen at any workplace.
  • Fall injuries are preventable.
A man is on a roof working on shingles. Photo credit Getty images/jacquesdurocher.

Why it's important

Fall injuries are a common workplace injury.

The construction industry experiences the highest frequency of fall-related deaths. These deaths are mostly falls from heights.

The highest counts of nonfatal fall injuries are in the educational and health services and the healthcare and social assistance industries. These injuries are mostly slips and falls on the same level.

Other industries at high risk of fall injuries include:

  • Nursing and residential care
  • Ambulance services
  • Building cleaning and maintenance
  • Transportation and material moving

Fact‎

In 2020, 805 workers died from falls.1 211,640 suffered severe injuries requiring days away from work in the private industry.2

Impacts

Fall injuries create a considerable financial burden.

In the United States, workers' compensation and medical expenses associated with workplace falls are estimated to cost $70 billion annually.3

Other countries face similar challenges in the workplace. In fact, the international public health community has a strong interest in developing strategies to reduce fall injuries.

National campaign to prevent falls‎

Falls are the number one cause of construction worker fatalities. The goal of the national campaign is to prevent fatal falls. Each year as part of the campaign, there is a National Stand-Down focusing on fall prevention.

Safety risks

Falls in the workplace frequently involve:

  • Unprotected edges
  • Unsafely positioned ladders
  • Misused fall protection
  • Water, grease, and other contaminants on the floor
  • Clutter and tripping hazards in walkways
  • Irregularities in the floor and wall openings

Prevention

Federal regulations and industry consensus standards provide specific measures and performance-based recommendations for fall prevention and protection. However, persistent unsafe practices and low safety culture across many industries define steady fall injury rates each year.

Reducing fall injury and death rates require:

  • Implementing new effective fall prevention and protection technologies
  • Using appropriate PPE like harnesses, fall guards, and slip-resistant footwear4
  • Improving the work safety culture by educating the workforce

These efforts require continued collaboration from:

  • Regulators
  • Industry leaders
  • Professional associations
  • Labor unions
  • Employers and employees
  • Safety professionals
  • Researchers

Traumatic occupational injury research labs‎

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Division of Safety Research (DSR) conducts research to prevent work-related injuries and deaths from falls across all industries. Review our Traumatic Occupational Injury Research Labs brochure for an overview of DSR labs.

What CDC is doing

As a leader in occupational safety research, NIOSH plays a key role in these complex fall-injury prevention efforts.

NIOSH bases fall-injury prevention research strategic planning and goal setting on:

  • The magnitude or emergence of the problem as shown by data
  • Immediacy of need
  • Resources and expertise available to work on the problem
  • Current research
  • Strength of partnerships
  • Status and momentum on research-to-practice efforts

Input from the National Academy of Sciences program review enhances the strategic planning process.

Resources

Infographic

Slip-Resistant Shoes Reduce Food Services Worker Slip Injuries NIOSH Infographic (2019)

En español

Poster

CDC - NORA Traumatic Injury Prevention Cross-Sector Council - Posters

More on falls‎

See the NIOSHTIC-2 database search results on falls. NIOSHTIC-2 is a database of occupational safety and health publications funded in whole or in part by NIOSH.
  1. BLS (2021) TABLE A‐1. Fatal occupational injuries by industry and event or exposure, all United States, 2020: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
  2. BLS (2022). TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, private industry, 2020: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
  3. NSC [2002]. Report on injuries in America 2002. Itasca, IL: National Safety Council.
  4. Bell JL, Collins JW, Chiou S. 2019. Effectiveness of a ‘no cost to workers’ slip-resistant footwear program for reducing slipping-related injuries in food service workers: a cluster randomized trial. Scand J Work Environ Health, 45(2):194–202.