KFF Health News (1/14, Ridderbusch ) reports, “Over 5,000 male construction workers die from suicide annually – five times the number who die from work-related injuries, according to several studies.” That is “considerably more than the suicide rate for men in the general population.” BL Harbert International, a construction company, “has added mental health first-aid training for on-site supervisors and distributed information about suicide prevention to laborers in the field.” According to KFF Health News, “the efforts are part of a larger push led by the industry and supported by unions, research institutions, and federal agencies to address construction workers’ mental health.” However, “initiatives to combat this mental health crisis are tougher to implement than protocols for hard hats, safety vests, and protective goggles.” Additionally, “some of the potential solutions, such as paid sick leave, have drawn pushback from the industry as it eyes costs.”
Related Links:
— “Beyond Hard Hats: Mental Struggles Become the Deadliest Construction Industry Danger,”Katja Ridderbusch, KFF Health News, January 14, 2025