Recent NHS England admissions data (2022/23–2024/25) reveals a pattern that should make every employer take notice: when men end up in hospital, a significant portion of the top causes are closely tied to work-related activity — even when they aren’t explicitly labelled as “work risk factors”.
Falls from scaffolding. Contact with machinery. Motorcycle incidents occurring during work hours. Heavy lifting injuries. Violence at work. These categories may appear separately in the dataset, but the real story is that occupational risks remain one of the biggest drivers of serious injury for men in England.
Below the surface of the spreadsheet is a simple truth: health and safety at work (or lack of it) is still one of the most predictable ways people get hurt.
The Data: Work-Linked Incidents Dominate the Male Side of the Chart
The NHS data shows the following high-frequency causes of admission for men that have clear or probable links to workplace activity:
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Falls from scaffolding (9.4%)
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Motorcycle rider incidents with another vehicle (9.4%)
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Contact with machinery (8.5%)
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Assault – open wound (8.5%)
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Injury from powered hand tools (8.2%)
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Lifting/carrying/strenuous movement (7.3%)
Even when not explicitly tagged as “work-related”, the mechanism of injury is the giveaway. Scaffolding and machinery aren’t part of most people’s leisure time. Heavy lifting injuries aren’t coming from shopping bags. And a large portion of motorcycle road-user injuries involve people commuting or travelling for work.
For women, the causes of admission trend far more towards medical and reproductive care. But for men, the pattern is unmistakable: the workplace remains a primary battleground for preventable harm.
Why This Matters: The Hidden Cost of Everyday Risk
Most organisations assume that “serious accidents” are rare events, limited to high-risk industries. The NHS data suggests the opposite. Work-linked injuries aren’t freak occurrences — they show up repeatedly, in every dataset we collect.
Three points stand out:
1. The risks are overwhelmingly familiar
The majority of these causes involve routine, everyday tasks: climbing, lifting, using tools, driving, operating equipment. Familiarity leads to shortcuts; shortcuts lead to hospital admissions.
2. These injuries are expensive
A hospital admission is just the visible cost. Behind it sits the employer impact: lost working time, replacements or agency staff, insurance premiums, civil claims, HSE investigations, reputational damage.
3. Most of this is entirely preventable
Good systems, competent supervision, better training, and improved situational awareness remove most of the risk before it ever reaches the hospital ward.
The Male Risk Profile: Why Men Show Up More Often in the Injury Columns
Several consistent behavioural and workplace patterns explain the male skew:
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Men disproportionately work in roles involving height, machinery, tools, and vehicles.
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They engage more frequently in risk-taking behaviours (documented across multiple HSE and NHS datasets).
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They tend to under-report minor injuries and near misses, increasing the likelihood of serious incidents.
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They are more likely to work alone or without close supervision.
This isn’t a social commentary — it’s a management insight. If your workforce has a high percentage of men in operational roles, you already have a higher baseline risk profile. The data simply quantifies it.
What Forward-Thinking Organisations Should Do
NHS data isn’t designed as a workplace report — but it might be more revealing than many internal audits. The patterns it exposes aren’t abstract trends. They map directly onto the training needs and safety competencies that reduce real harm.
A practical response includes:
1. Equip staff with modern, accessible safety training
Courses like IOSH Managing Safely, NEBOSH, build the kind of decision-making competence that breaks the chain of common accidents.
2. Reinforce the fundamentals
Most of the causes listed aren’t exotic. They’re everyday controllable risks. Managers need to be confident in:
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Risk assessment
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Safe systems of work
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Incident and near-miss analysis
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Manual handling
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Machinery and equipment safety
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Work at height controls
3. Connect training to real injury data
Workplace training becomes far more effective when employees understand the real-world consequences. Showing people national admission data cuts through complacency in a way that policy documents never will.
4. Build a culture that doesn’t normalise shortcuts
Most admissions in the dataset represent a moment where a routine job went wrong. That’s precisely what safety culture seeks to prevent.
The Takeaway
This dataset is a reminder of something obvious but often forgotten: we’ve never “solved” health and safety. The risks that put people in hospital remain the same ones we see on every job site.
If anything, the NHS data reinforces the value of consistent, credible, and practical training. It’s the single most reliable way to reduce the kinds of injuries that show up in these statistics — not by luck, but by competence.

