Workplace quiz reveals whether your place of work is a health and safety nightmare

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Almost three-quarters (71 percent) said their desks are not configured properly, meaning they regularly suffer aches and pains.

And more than half (55 percent) complain about poor air quality – and reckon they go the entire day without breathing fresh air.

A spokesman for Andrews Air Quality, which commissioned the research, said: “There are no doubt some majorly varying workplaces across the country when it comes to health and safety.

“And while there are lots of obvious dangers that can befall you at work, like being in a busy warehouse environment, many risks are a lot more low key.

“Things like not sitting at a properly-configured desk day in and day out, for example, can play havoc with your back.

“And air quality is also tremendously important, especially now we are in a world where Covid exists and fresh air is absolutely vital.”

Just over half of the 2,000 working adults polled have been injured at work – from a scratch to a broken bone.

And the main cause of injury risk was deemed to be mental – overworked employees at risk of burnout (27 percent).

Another 23 percent regularly work around cables they believe could be a tripping hazard, while 19 percent say they don’t get any natural light.

A further one in five have worked places that have had spillages that have not been cleaned up, and 15 percent have seen plug sockets overloaded with electrical items.

One in four respondents confess to not knowing their company’s fire policy – and the same amount have reported a health hazard, only to see it ignored.

As many as three in ten have actually quit a job because they felt it was too dangerous, according to the OnePoll.com data.

More than a tenth (13 percent) of office workers report their office windows don’t open, depriving them of a fresh breeze.

And yet one in three (34 percent) believe the only “really dangerous” workplaces are physical ones like building sites or warehouses – not offices.

And almost three-quarters (seven in ten) say offices are simply not dangerous workplaces at all.

The spokesman for Andrews Air Quality added: “The research shows there’s definitely some more education to be done in terms of dangers at work.

“Just because you’re not at risk of being run over by a forklift, doesn’t mean you can’t be at risk in other ways.

“All workplace managers should – especially as offices start to re-open – be working hard to ensure everyone’s safety.”

The full results of the study can be found here.

THE TOP 20 HEALTH AND SAFETY BREACHES SEEN IN BRITISH WORKPLACES:

  1. Overworked employees who may succumb to stress and burnout
  2. Cables that someone could trip over
  3. No natural light
  4. Spillages that nobody is clearing up
  5. Bad ventilation
  6. Wet floors without a “wet floor” sign
  7. Loose flooring
  8. Overloaded plug sockets
  9. Blocked fire escapes
  10. People not wearing the proper safety equipment
  11. Exposed wires
  12. No fire training
  13. Windows that don’t have safety catches
  14. People operating heavy machinery without proper licensing/training
  15. Electrical equipment next to water sources
  16. No emergency lighting
  17. A fire extinguisher that you know doesn’t work
  18. Mislabelled chemicals
  19. Fire alarms that don’t work
  20. Broken air purifier

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