| Australian Politics Forum | |
|
http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl
General Discussion >> General Board >> Deaths in construction sector http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1448164893 Message started by bogarde73 on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 2:01pm |
|
|
Title: Deaths in construction sector Post by bogarde73 on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 2:01pm
Construction workers six times more likely to die by suicide than in workplace accidents
The World Today By Rachael Brown Posted Fri at 3:31pm MATES in Construction also said suicide and suicidal behaviour cost the industry more than $1.5 billion a year. It is calling for prevention programs to be rolled out on every construction site in Australia. When Justin Geange faced losing his plumbing job of 20 years, he could only see one way out for his family's security. "As a bloke you don't tend to talk to too many people about failing," he said. "I thought the best thing I could do to support my family in the future was to take my life and activate my life insurance." After his suicide attempt, Mr Geange woke up form a coma in hospital angry that, in his eyes, he had failed again. "What I didn't realise was that so many mates in the industry that were doing it tough," he said. "Like when I was in hospital I got visits from all these guys that had I had no idea were in ... the same headspace. "So many guys doing it tough, but we just don't talk about it." Mr Geange said his wife and family were furious with him. "A lot of anger there," he said. "You get a lot of people saying you're selfish and all that but it's like sitting in the picture theatre when you're in the front row, you don't really see the big picture, the full picture when you're right in the heart of that depression. "All I could see was my girls needed to be funded for the rest of their lives. That would make them happy. "But I'm pretty glad I'm still here because every day they make me smile and I squeeze them a bit tighter and hold them a bit longer." Construction workers not as tough as people think MATES in Construction chief executive Jorgen Gullestrup said suicide and suicidal behaviour in the construction industry was both a huge social and financial burden. "The cost to the Australian community is over $1.5 billion per year, because of course it's not only the people who die by suicide and the trauma for the people left behind but it's also the people who attempt suicide who end up with a permanent disability as a result of it," he said. Mr Gullestrup said he would like to see suicide prevention initiatives set up at construction sites across the country. "We need to have peer support programs in place where constructions workers are aware of what it looks like when a mate is dropping a bit and can ask the question, 'Are you OK?'" he said. Mr Gullestrup said a program running in Queensland had made great inroads. "Preliminary research we have done in Queensland have shown that over the first five years of the program, suicide rates dropped by 7.8 per cent," he said. Mr Geange said while construction workers were thought of as tough, a lot of people were hurting. He said he was happy cultural change within the industry had begun and wanted to help spread the message that it is OK to speak up. "[We need] for people to get stuff off their chest and not have to wait until that critical moment where they make a decision that changes their whole community," he said. |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by bogarde73 on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 2:02pm
Who would have thought that eh?
Workers Comp premiums should come down then. |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by Sun Tzu on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 2:50pm bogarde73 wrote on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 2:02pm:
Replaced by suicide compensation with disease titled industrial dysentery. Work gave them the sh1ts. This story exemplifies one of the big problems with high paying resource jobs. The worker becomes addicted to the high remuneration and adjusts his lifestyle upwards to reflect the income level. When the job is terminated the worker feels he has been discarded and faces lower pay jobs and economic distress. The second problem is that workers may not leave a high pay job they don't like because of addiction to the money. So they keep working the job and suffer mental problems caused by dislike of their job. |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by Billy Jack on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 3:15pm
Like I done told y'all some years ago friend, y'alls gots to be prepare fer the murder suicide economies and such.
There's a post here on this here forum about it by me. Time to Prepare Fer the Murder Suicide Economies and Such, or some such title. And I believe I have found it friends, fer yer very own peepers http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?num=1429599496 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTizPFJcW0M Time fer the solution. They best be making more of them TV shows like Backyard Bogan and such to keep their spirits alive and such. Yer welcome. |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by Sun Tzu on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 3:39pm Billy Jack wrote on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 3:15pm:
Billy, if you didn't exist a team of mad scientists would have to capture a furtive fart and wrap a persona around it and create the Billy Jack simulacrum. |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by Billy Jack on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 5:48pm
Friend no one in the World or here fer that matter cares about what your Homo Candy Ass China Land Praising Pea Brain thinks on this. You are a big ass dangerous subversive here in our society and in our Internet Forum too.
Get the heck out! |
|
Title: Re: Deaths in construction sector Post by Sun Tzu on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 7:20pm Billy Jack wrote on Nov 22nd, 2015 at 5:48pm:
Billy, have you considered a FIFO job in the construction sector? |
|
Australian Politics Forum » Powered by YaBB 2.5.2! YaBB Forum Software © 2000-2026. All Rights Reserved. |