Written by Hannah B. Owings Saturley From Verrill on Dec 17, 2025
“On the tenth day of HR’s favorite season, my lawyers said to me… ten lords a-leaping (and a plan to maintain a safe workplace).”
While most employees aren’t literally leaping around the workplace, injuries happen more often—and in more mundane ways—than employers expect. Slips, strains, falls, repetitive-motion injuries, and equipment mishaps all remain among the most common sources of workers’ compensation claims. And for employers, every incident triggers a set of compliance obligations.
Today’s “tenth day” reminder is to keep your workplace safety practices strong, your reporting obligations tight, and your injury-prevention strategies proactive.
Ten Reminders About Workplace Injuries:
- Leap into hazard prevention
Regular inspections, equipment checks, and documented safety walkthroughs are your first line of defense.
- Train, retrain, repeat
Annual, onboarding, and task-specific safety training reduce both accidents and claims.
- Keep your OSHA logs merry and bright
Remember:
- Record qualifying injuries on the OSHA 300 Log
- Report serious injuries (fatalities within 8 hours; hospitalizations, amputations, eye loss within 24 hours)
- Encourage reporting without fear
Employees must feel safe raising concerns or reporting injuries. Retaliation risk is real—and costly.
- Investigate with care
Document what happened, gather statements, and preserve equipment. A calm, thorough process protects everyone.
- Mind your workers’ compensation duties
Notify your carrier promptly, provide forms, and communicate transparently with the injured worker.
- Check your holiday décor hazards
Cords, ladders, tinsel, and last-minute office decorating sprees are prime “lords a-leaping” conditions.
- Consider remote workers, too
Injuries at home can be work-related. Provide ergonomic guidance and clear reporting instructions.
- Avoid incentives that backfire
Programs that reward “zero injuries” can unintentionally discourage reporting.
- Use each incident to improve
Every near-miss or minor injury offers an opportunity to strengthen policies, training, or equipment.
The Takeaway
“Twelve Days” humor aside, a well-run safety program protects employees and employers alike. Staying ahead of hazards, responding promptly, and keeping solid records can prevent those leaping lords from landing you in compliance trouble.