
ENTENDA POR QUE TUDO ESTÁ FICANDO DESSA COR
28 de ABRIL VERDE
Dia Mundial em Memória
das Vítimas de Acidentes e
Doenças do Trabalho
#fst #28deabril #segtrabalho
FENATEST
SINTESPAR
UGT – União Geral dos Trabalhadores

ENTENDA POR QUE TUDO ESTÁ FICANDO DESSA COR
28 de ABRIL VERDE
Dia Mundial em Memória
das Vítimas de Acidentes e
Doenças do Trabalho
#fst #28deabril #segtrabalho
FENATEST
SINTESPAR
UGT – União Geral dos Trabalhadores
Every week in New Zealand 18 workers are killed as a consequence of work.
Every 15 minutes, a worker suffers an injury that requires more than a week off work.
Workers’ Memorial Day 28 April commemorates those working people killed and injured at work.
Workers’ Memorial Day is an international trade union movement that honours working people killed and injured because of their work. We honour all workers, and their whanau, who have been impacted by workplace accidents, illnesses, and injuries in the last year.
Workers’ Memorial Day is also a call for protecting and improving the systems intended to keep workers safe and healthy at work.
In New Zealand, the number of workplace injuries, fatalities, and deaths from work-related health remain unacceptably high. Every week 18 workers are killed as a consequence of their work, every 15 minutes a worker suffers an injury that requires more than week off work.
Every one of these incidents are preventable.
Unions will be hosting #IWMD events across the motu, find one near you: Let us know if you’ll be hosting an event.
Workers’ Memorial Day is a call to action to fight for protecting and improving the laws that keep working people safe and healthy at work.
Now more than ever we need to fight for our rights. The Minister for Workplace Relations and Safety, Brooke van Velden, has recently announced changes to weaken health and safety laws and regulation. We’ve also seen the ongoing lack of decisive action to ban engineered stone, and protect workers from all silica dust.
Rather than being led by the evidence, worker safety is being eroded in the pursuit of Act Party ideology.
What’s worse is that these changes are being driven by a narrative of cutting red tape and economic efficiency. Far too often we see the real cost of a system that fails to protect working people – whānau killed at work, friends lost to the impact of work on their health, and colleagues off injured from accidents at work. It is our communities who are bearing the true costs of preventable tragedy.
Join us on Workers’ Memorial Day 28 April 2026 and fight back for your right to a safe and healthy workplace.
More than 840,000 people die each year from health conditions linked to psychosocial risks, such as long working hours, job insecurity, and workplace harassment, according to a new global report by the International Labour Organization (ILO). These work-related psychosocial risks are mainly associated with cardiovascular diseases and mental disorders, including suicide.
The report also finds that these risks account for nearly 45 million disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost annually, reflecting years of healthy life lost due to illness, disability, or premature death, and are estimated to result in economic losses equivalent to 1.37 per cent of global GDP each year.
The report, The psychosocial working environment: Global developments and pathways for action, highlights the growing impact of how work is designed, organized, and managed on workers’ safety and health. It warns that psychosocial risk factors—including long working hours, job insecurity, high demands with low control, and workplace bullying and harassment—can create harmful working environments if not properly addressed.
International Workers Memorial Day (IWMD) 28 April commemorates those workers.
Trade unions and organisations are putting on #IWMD events across the country. Find one near you or if you’re organising one add it to our list.
Join union activists across the country by taking part in a one minute silence at 12.00 to remember all those who have died because of their work.
Honour those we have lost and pay respects by submitting a tribute on the International Workers Memorial Wall.
Use the hashtag #IWMD on social media channels to help spread the word about the day and why you’re getting involved. We have produced a range of graphics for you to use and share. This campaign pack includes a selection of images to use on social media, and posters for you to print at home or print professionally.
Psycho killer
Work should not be miserable. It should not leave you desperate…
Get support. Get active.
Get organised!
Download the poster from Hazards Magazine here
In the run up to psychosocial hazards-themed International Workers’ Memorial Day health service union UNISON has said health workers need better support to cope with the pressures they face.
A third of NHS employees have taken time off for mental health issues in the past year with many staff talking about reaching “breaking point”, according to new findings released by UNISON on 15 April 2026.
A survey of health workers, including nurses, occupational therapists and paramedics, has also found more than four in five (85%) have experienced stress at work over the past 12 months.
Staff say stress has had a significant impact on their mental and physical health, with symptoms including anxiety, PTSD, panic attacks, migraines, and sleep disturbance.
Some have experienced high blood pressure, stress-related vomiting, dizziness and breathlessness, according to the findings of the union survey. One NHS worker even reported suffering a heart attack due to understaffing and high workloads.
Many described reaching breaking point, feeling exhausted and overwhelmed by sustained levels of stress. This has affected their relationships and family lives, with some reporting suicidal thoughts, UNISON says.
NHS workers also described taking antidepressants and beta-blocker drugs, as well as undergoing cognitive behavioural therapy and counselling.
UNISON says the findings – based on responses from more than 19,000 staff and released during the union’s annual health conference in Edinburgh – paint a grim picture when the NHS workforce is under pressure to reduce waiting lists.
Almost a quarter (23%) didn’t tell their employer the real reason for their absence from work. Of those, most said they did not feel their manager would support them, while concerns about stigma and not wanting colleagues to know were also common.
Counselling, medication or other forms of support had been sought in the past year by more than one in four (28%) of those under stress. Almost two thirds (65%) of those who had taken time off for stress reported feeling that they were under pressure to come to work, despite feeling mentally unwell. This adds strain to an already overstretched workforce, UNISON says.
The Covid inquiry into the impact of the pandemic on the UK’s healthcare systems highlighted the “almost superhuman efforts” of NHS staff despite the significant and long-lasting impact on their mental health and wellbeing.
Ongoing pressures and staff shortages since the pandemic are only adding to the problem, says UNISON.
UNISON head of health Helga Pile said: “Such high levels of stress in the NHS should be ringing alarm bells. Staff who care for others are being pushed to the point that they’re becoming unwell themselves.
“There should be no stigma around mental health, especially in healthcare. Staff need proper support to cope with the pressures they face.
“Government and employers must do more to help staff with their mental health, including providing fast-track access to treatment and moving away from punitive and counter-productive absence policies.
“They must also act to ensure the NHS is safely staffed to meet the growing needs of communities.”
Notes to editors:
– The survey was conducted from 27 January to 27 February 2026 and received 19,356 responses from staff working in healthcare across England, Scotland and Northern Ireland including nurses, paramedics, pharmacists, admin workers and cleaners.
– Staff experiences recorded by the survey include:
“Stress has brought on an eating disorder, and my mental health has suffered tremendously.” Health care assistant, Yorkshire
“I’ve started to take a high dose of antidepressants. I struggle to sleep. It affects my mood at home with my family. I’ve developed a twitch in my eye which the doctor and optometrist say is down to stress and fatigue.” Admin worker, Yorkshire
“I’m on anxiety medication. I’ve just finished some counselling but may restart in the future.” Mental health nurse, Yorkshire
“I’m on medication, regularly see a psychiatrist and psychologist, and have had to take sick leave.” Nurse, North West
“I’ve been so stressed I had a heart attack before Christmas due to no staff and massive workloads.” Admin worker, North West
“My stress manifested in physical symptoms such as stomach aches, vomiting, shaking and overwhelming anxiety when I walk into work. I also started pulling my hair out and it’s triggered by things such as heavy workloads.” Estates and facilities worker, North West
“I’ve developed depression and anxiety due to work, to the point I had negative thoughts and my GP has prescribed antidepressants. I’m constantly stressed and dread going to work. Constant micromanagement and demands are increasing burnout and anxiety.” Paramedic, London
“I often feel overwhelmed by my workload and struggle to switch off from my job, which has caused constant worry and anxiety. This stress made concentrating difficult and reduced my confidence in carrying out tasks. I also experience fatigue, low mood and have difficulty sleeping, and that’s affected my overall wellbeing and performance at work.” Midwife, London
“I have high levels of anxiety and constantly fear making mistakes due to the workload and staffing issues. I’ve experienced hair thinning, poor appetite, dehydration and urinary infections, because I’m unable to pause for a drink. My immune system is poor because I feel burnout, but I fear taking any time off leads to financial issues.” Nurse, West Midlands
“I underwent counselling to help me deal with my work-life balance. I had an occupational health referral that recommended redeployment to come off the road to help reduce stress, but this wasn’t accommodated on my return.” Emergency ambulance associate, South West
“Work pressure was overwhelming. As the weeks went by, I was getting worse: crying as I drove to work, struggling to cope with daily pressure. I was emotional, not eating or sleeping, lacked confidence, withdrew from social and family events. I struggled to even do grocery shopping. It’s something I hope I never go through again.” Admin worker, East of England
“Stress at work has affected my marriage, my ability to socialise and I feel constantly on the verge of tears.” Clinical support worker, Scotland
“My workload is unrealistic. I’m covering two people’s jobs whilst a colleague is on maternity. There’s very little support from senior management. I’ve been signed off by my GP due to work-related stress and high blood pressure for six weeks. I’m now on medication and looking for other jobs.” Admin worker, Northern Ireland
– UNISON’s annual health conference began on Monday (13 April) and continues until today (Wednesday 15 April) at the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, Edinburgh EH3 8EE. UNISON general secretary Andrea Egan gave the keynote speech on Monday afternoon. Health workers from across the UK have been in attendance to debate a variety of motions including NHS pay, a greener NHS, bank staff, support for migrant workers, mental health, sexual safety, problems with NHS salary scales, and safe staffing.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union and the largest union in the NHS and in the ambulance sector, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

April 28 is the labour movement’s most solemn day, but also one to refocus our commitment to preventing future workplace injuries and deaths. Every year, thousands of workers, friends and families of fallen workers gather at ceremonies across Canada to recognize the National Day of Mourning for workers killed or injured on the job. As we mourn for the dead, the Canadian Labour Congress continues to fight for the living.

Transport union RMT, will hold a national day of action to tackle the growing threat of assaults across the rail, bus, metro and ferry sectors on April 28.
The Workers’ Memorial Day ceremony will be held on Wednesday 29th April at the Alameda Gardens.
It will be a collaborative event between Unite the union and the Government, organised by Cultural Services.
The ceremony will begin at ten, and will be led by the Chief Minister, Fabian Picardo.
One Worker Dies Every 104 Minutes: National COSH Dirty Dozen 2026 Exposes Dangerous Companies Putting Workers at Risk
Los Angeles, CA – On April 22, marking the beginning of Workers’ Memorial Week—observed this year from April 22 to April 29—the National Council for Occupational Safety and Health (National COSH) has released its 2026 Dirty Dozen report, identifying twelve companies that have put workers’ lives at risk through unsafe practices, inadequate protections, and systemic neglect. The report comes as federal workplace health and safety penalties drop nearly 45 percent during the current administration, according to Good Jobs First, raising alarm about declining enforcement just as preventable deaths, injuries, and illnesses continue across the country. The Dirty Dozen underscores the urgent need for stronger enforcement and corporate accountability.
“Every year, we honor workers who have lost their lives on the job, and every year, we see the same pattern: companies prioritizing profit over people,” said Jessica E. Martinez, MPH, Executive Director of National COSH. “The Dirty Dozen 2026 makes clear that these tragedies are not accidents, they are the result of choices. Employers must be held accountable, and workers must be empowered to speak out without fear.”
Across industries, the report documents recurring corporate failures that placed workers at risk, including extreme heat, hazardous machinery, toxic chemicals, wage theft, retaliation, and exploitative labor practices. Weak enforcement, reflected in a 47 percent drop in workplace health and safety penalties in 2025, and complex subcontracting systems allow companies to evade responsibility while workers bear the consequences.
The Dirty Dozen 2026 includes the following companies, listed in alphabetical order:
Workers directly impacted by these conditions shared powerful testimonies that underscore the human cost of unsafe workplaces.
Gustavo Reyes Gonzalez, former engineered stonecutter who worked with Cambria products and is now living with silicosis, said: “For more than a decade, I cut and polished engineered stone without knowing the dust I was breathing could kill me. By the time I was diagnosed with silicosis, my lungs were already severely damaged. No one warned me about the risks or the silica in the product. If I had known, I would have chosen a different path to protect my life.”
A catfish processing worker at Consolidated Catfish Producers, LLC, who requested anonymity due to fear of retaliation, said: “The heat inside the plant is overwhelming. By the time we reach a break, we are dizzy and dehydrated, and we don’t always have safe access to water. People get seriously injured on the machines, and others are put in their place without proper training. It feels like safety is not a priority.”
Kissy Cox, an auto manufacturing worker at Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Company, part of the Hyundai-Kia U.S. supply chain, said: “I reported my injuries, but I was still required to work in pain for months before getting proper medical attention. Many of my coworkers are going through the same thing. The company says it’s a safe place to work, but the reality does not match what we experience.”
An auto manufacturing supply chain worker employed through a subcontractor connected to the Hyundai-Kia U.S. Supply Chain, who requested anonymity, said: “We see safety violations every day, from inadequate training to dangerous conditions that put lives at risk. Workers have been injured and even killed, yet there is little accountability. We want safe jobs, not just promises.”
A food processing worker at Maker’s Pride LLC (formerly Hearthside, LLC), who requested anonymity due to risk of retaliation, said: “We are pushed to work faster and faster, often skipping water or bathroom breaks because of the pressure. People get sick, dizzy, and injured, but many do not report it because they are afraid of losing their jobs. We are treated like machines instead of human beings.”
Martinez added: “No one should have to risk their life to earn a paycheck. These workers are showing tremendous courage by speaking out. Their voices must shape stronger protections, real accountability, and every worker’s right to return home safe.” National COSH calls on policymakers for stronger workplace protections, increased enforcement resources, accountability across supply chains, federal health protections, and safeguards against retaliation when workers speak out.
Dirty Dozen 2026 report