The Scale of Manual Handling Injuries in Construction
The construction industry has one of the worst records for work-related musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) of any UK industry. Manual handling — lifting, carrying, pushing and pulling heavy or awkward loads — is the single largest contributor.
In absolute terms, this translates to tens of thousands of workers suffering work-related MSD injuries each year in the construction sector alone. Many of these injuries are career-ending: back injuries, shoulder damage and chronic joint conditions that prevent workers from continuing in physically demanding roles.
Which Tasks Cause the Most Injuries?
The HSE's construction MSD data identifies the following task categories as the primary sources of manual handling injuries on construction sites:
- Manual carrying of heavy materials — bricks, blocks, steel sections, timber, concrete products
- Handling of fencing and barriers — Heras fence panels, crowd control barriers and similar items are heavy, awkward and typically handled individually in repetitive operations
- Repetitive bending, reaching and twisting — laying cables, pipework installation, formwork assembly
- Lifting from awkward positions — trenching, confined space work and work at low levels
- Manual fuel and liquid handling — jerry cans, drum handling and pump management
The Legal Framework: MHOR 2002
The Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 (as amended) (MHOR) require employers to: avoid hazardous manual handling operations where reasonably practicable; assess those that cannot be avoided; and take appropriate steps to reduce the risk of injury. The key word is "avoid" — not "manage". Where mechanical handling can eliminate manual handling, it should be used.
Mechanical Solutions for Common Construction Manual Handling Tasks
Heras Fence Panel Handling
Installing 200 Heras fence panels with 5 operatives manually takes 2–3 days. The MW Equipment FenceBag carries 54 panels per lift, reducing the same job to 4–6 hours with 2–3 operatives. Loading and unloading that traditionally takes 3–4 hours takes approximately 15 minutes. The manual handling exposure — the primary injury risk — is eliminated.
The FenceBag → 54 Heras panels per lift. 200-panel installation in 4–6 hours.
Crowd Control Barrier Handling
Traditional barrier deployment — 3 operatives at ~30 barriers per hour — involves constant lifting, carrying and positioning. The BarrierBag carries 144 barriers per load and deploys at 60–80 per hour with a single operator. Labour exposure is reduced by two-thirds.
Fuel and Liquid Management
Jerry can fuelling — perhaps the highest-risk manual handling method for liquid fuels — can be eliminated entirely using the FuelBag, which delivers fuel directly to each machine via an 8-metre hose reel. No jerry cans. No lifting, carrying or pouring.
The Business Case for Reduction
Beyond the legal obligation and the human cost, manual handling injuries have direct financial consequences: sick pay, temporary workers to cover absence, potential employer's liability claims, increased insurance premiums, and HSE enforcement action. The investment in mechanical handling equipment — which typically pays back through labour savings alone — also carries significant risk-reduction value that doesn't appear in the ROI calculation.
Use our ROI Calculator to calculate the labour saving from FenceBag or BarrierBag for your specific operation.