The Fatal Four
Every year, OSHA identifies the four leading causes of fatalities in the construction industry. Together, they account for more than 60% of all construction worker deaths:
The fourth category, Caught-In/Between (6.1%), involves workers crushed, caught, or compressed by equipment, materials, or collapsing structures.
Falls: The #1 Killer in Construction
Falls from elevation are the single deadliest hazard in construction, accounting for nearly 4 in 10 construction fatalities. Common fall scenarios include:
- Falls from roofs, scaffolding, and ladders
- Falls through floor openings and skylights
- Falls from unprotected edges and leading edges
- Falls during steel erection
OSHA requirements (29 CFR 1926 Subpart M):
- Fall protection required at 6 feet or more above a lower level in construction
- Acceptable methods: guardrails, safety nets, personal fall arrest systems
- All floor holes and wall openings must be covered or guarded
- Workers must be trained on fall hazards and protection systems
Struck-By Hazards
Workers hit by falling, flying, swinging, or rolling objects. Common scenarios:
- Materials falling from overhead work
- Workers struck by vehicles on active job sites
- Tools or debris ejected from power equipment
- Loads swinging from cranes or rigging
Prevention essentials:
- Hard hats required in all areas with overhead hazards
- High-visibility vests for workers near vehicle traffic
- Secure all tools and materials at elevation
- Establish exclusion zones under crane operations
Electrocution
Contact with live electrical sources, particularly overhead power lines, exposed wiring, and damaged electrical equipment:
- Maintain minimum 10-foot clearance from overhead power lines (higher for higher voltages)
- Use GFCI protection on all temporary power
- Inspect all cords and equipment daily
- Lock out/tag out all electrical systems before work
- Only qualified electricians should work on electrical systems
Caught-In/Between
Workers caught, crushed, or compressed between objects:
- Trench and excavation collapses (cave-ins)
- Workers caught in unguarded machinery
- Compressed between vehicles and fixed objects
- Structural collapses
OSHA requires trench protection (sloping, shoring, or shielding) for all excavations 5 feet or deeper. A competent person must inspect trenches daily.
Building Reporting Culture on Job Sites
Construction sites present unique reporting challenges:
- Transient workforce. Workers move between sites and employers, reducing connection to any single safety program.
- Multiple contractors. Hazards created by one subcontractor may endanger another's workers, but reporting across company lines is rare.
- Production pressure. Tight schedules and weather constraints create pressure to cut safety corners.
- Language barriers. Multi-language workforces need reporting tools available in their native language.
- Fear of job loss. Day laborers and subcontracted workers have even less job security than permanent employees.
Effective safety reporting in construction requires anonymous, mobile, multi-language tools that workers can access on their personal phones without identifying themselves to any employer on the site.
Safety Reporting Built for Construction
Heardsafe's mobile-first, anonymous platform gives construction workers a voice — regardless of which contractor they work for or what language they speak.
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