UK

Construction workers four times more likely to die by suicide as 7,000 lives lost – report

Construction workers are four times more likely to die by suicide than the national average, making it one of the deadliest professions for mental health problems in the UK, according to a new report.

Social media company On The Tools, the UK’s largest community of tradespeople, has found that 73% of the country’s 2.1 million construction workers have been affected by mental illness.

In the last decade, 7,000 have taken their own lives.

“If doctors or teachers were seeing those rates of suicide in any other industry, I think there would be a national outcry”, said Alice Brooks, the company’s brand manager.

“But because it’s construction, I think people don’t necessarily have the best perception of tradespeople, it’s being ignored.

Alice Brooks from On The Tools
Image:
‘These suicide rates in any other industry would cause a national outcry,’ says Alice Brooks

“When four times the number of people are dying by suicide – who will build our hospitals, who will build our schools, maintain our roads and infrastructure?”

The company is trying to raise £2.5m to fund counselling for workers in the industry.

James Reeves, 33, who runs Royal Spa Decoration in Leamington Spa, told Sky News how he had contemplated suicide after suffering injuries to his back and pelvis in an accident while painting and decorating, then had his tools, worth £2,500 stolen.

James Reeves
Image:
‘For a long time taking my own life consumed my every waking thought’

James Reeves
Image:
Mr Reeves injured his back and pelvis in an accident while painting and decorating

“One of the worst pressures was financial”, James explained.

“I had guys working for me on payroll, I had to earn a certain amount to make a profit every month, you can imagine if you’re off work for three months and unable to meet those numbers, meet those deadlines it doesn’t take long before you find yourself in a hole financially.

Graphic

“For me personally I just felt like a failure to everyone around me and the only way out was to kind of disappear.”

James continued: “For a long time taking my own life consumed my every waking thought and for a long time I woke up thinking that was going to be the day I took my own life. It did take quite a while to get out of that place, but I was lucky in that I got out, whereas a lot of other people aren’t that fortunate.”

Graphic

The report also found that work absences related to mental illness are costing the industry £2.7bn a year.

Read more:
UK has ‘problem’ with construction workforce
UK economy shrinks again in October

Graphic

Ms Brooks added: “When you start factoring in isolation – a lot of workers in this industry lone work or are self-employed and there is that feeling of isolation and loneliness.

“Then you add financial pressures, then industry pressures such as tool theft – we found 68% of tradespeople worry daily about tool theft which shows those wider pressures are affecting those in the trade.”

Anyone feeling emotionally distressed or suicidal can call Samaritans for help on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org in the UK. In the US, call the Samaritans branch in your area or 1 (800) 273-TALK.

Articles You May Like

Chess grandmaster rejoins tournament he quit over wearing jeans – after dress code change
Sasaki met with ‘set few’ of 20 interested teams
Alibaba slashes prices on large language models by up to 85% as China AI rivalry heats up
SpaceX’s Starship to Deploy Mock Starlink Satellites in Flight 7 Test
Meta replaces policy chief Nick Clegg with former Republican staffer Joel Kaplan ahead of Trump inauguration