A notifiable injury or illness is a specified serious work-related injury or illness.
All injuries or illnesses that require (or would usually require) a person to be admitted to a hospital for immediate treatment are notifiable.
Other types of injuries and illnesses that also require notification are set out below:
- Amputation of any body part that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- A serious head injury that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- A serious eye injury that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- A serious burn that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- Skin separating from an underlying tissue (degloving or scalping) that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- A spinal injury that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid)
- Loss of a bodily function that requires immediate treatment (other than first aid), for example, through electric shock or acute reaction to a substance used at work
- Serious lacerations that require immediate treatment (other than first aid)
'Medical treatment’ is considered to be treatment by a registered medical practitioner, for example, a doctor.
‘Immediate treatment’ is urgent treatment, and includes treatment by a registered medical practitioner, registered nurse or paramedic. If immediate treatment is not readily available, for example, because the injury happened at a remote site, the notification must still be made.