A New Approach to Reducing Serious Injuries and Fatalities [podcast]
Traditional safety metrics often miss the human factors contributing to serious harm, emphasizing the need for human-centric approaches that address stress, fatigue, and psychological risks. In this "In Case You Missed It" podcast, you'll hear why Jonathan English, CEO of Evotix, believes that 2026 is the time for a complete system rebuild to help companies reach meaningful SIF reduction.
Rebuilding SIF Prevention in 2026
By Jonathan English
Despite decades of effort, serious injury & fatality (SIF) rates remain alarmingly steady. This isn’t from a lack of commitment but a misalignment in how risk is defined, measured and managed. A unique opportunity to radically reduce SIFs is emerging, but it will require a system rebuild, not more add-ons.
When We Disagree What Serious Means
While basic compliance and incident-prevention programs have driven down minor-incident rates in past decades, traditional safety efforts have yielded diminishing returns on serious work injuries. The good news is that organizations are now pushing beyond compliance checklists to focus on life-altering harm. According to the Risk Recalibrated: the 2026 Executive Leadership Report, 80% of responding organizations have SIF prevention programs in place. But the lack of universal acceptance of what constitutes a SIF is a problem.
SIF definitions vary not only across companies but sometimes within them. Some might restrict SIFs to immediate, high-severity physical trauma, while others include long illnesses or psychological trauma—to cite two common examples. These widely varying definitions lead to inconsistent classifications, uneven data, complications in operational benchmarking and therefore, confused priorities. Nearly 1 in 5 EHS leaders say traditional safety metrics have no relation to real risk, and more than half say they only partially reflect SIF drivers.
This misalignment results in critical risk exposure and a disconnect between executives, EHS teams and frontline workers, which only perpetuates the problem.
To make meaningful progress in reducing serious harm, alignment may not require a universal definition, but it does demand internal clarity. The first step in lowering SIF rates is for organizations to adopt their own definitions. You can start this process by convening key, cross-functional stakeholders, including safety teams, operations leaders and HR, to define SIF clearly across the organization.
Hear the full podcast by clicking the player below. Or click here to read the full article.
About the Author
Adrienne Selko
Senior Editor
Email [email protected]
Adrienne Selko is also the senior editor at Material Handling and Logistics and is a former editor of IndustryWeek.

