The outcome of a workplace injury is often decided within the first 24 hours.
Not in the treatment room weeks later. Not at the workers compensation hearing. In the moments immediately following the injury — in how quickly it is reported, how it is assessed, and what action is taken first.
This is the window that most organisations are losing. And it’s costing them significantly.
What Happens in the First 24 Hours?
Three critical decisions are made in this window:
- The worker decides whether to report — influenced by ease of access, workplace culture, and their understanding of the process
- The supervisor decides how to respond — influenced by training, experience, and available information
- The treatment pathway begins — or doesn’t, depending on the two decisions above
When all three go well, the injury is contained. When any one of them fails, escalation begins.
Early Action = Better Outcomes
When an injury is addressed immediately — within the first 24 hours — the data is clear:
- Severity is reduced — the injury doesn’t have time to worsen before intervention begins
- Recovery begins sooner — appropriate guidance or treatment starts from day one
- Claims are often avoided entirely — minor injuries managed early frequently resolve without becoming formal claims
- Return to work is faster — workers are engaged, supported, and recovering from the start
Delayed Action = Escalation
When the same injury is not addressed in the first 24 hours, a different pattern emerges:
- The injury worsens — physically and psychologically
- Lost time increases — days off extend as the injury becomes more significant
- Costs rise — treatment becomes more complex, claims become more likely
- Defensibility weakens — late reporting creates gaps in the record that are difficult to manage
The injury didn’t change. The response did. And that’s what determined the outcome.
Why Most Organisations Miss This Window
The first 24 hours are lost for predictable reasons:
- Reporting is too difficult — paper forms, busy supervisors, and complex processes discourage immediate reporting
- Workers push through — workplace culture often leads workers to minimise early discomfort until it becomes unavoidable
- No structured triage exists — without a system to assess the injury immediately, the response is inconsistent and often delayed
- Guidance isn’t available on the spot — workers and supervisors don’t know what to do, so they wait
The Ideal Response Model
Winning the first 24 hours requires three things to happen immediately:
- Immediate reporting — a simple, accessible mechanism for workers to report at first contact
- Structured triage — a consistent, evidence-based assessment of the injury’s severity and appropriate response
- Early guidance or escalation — low-risk injuries receive self-management support; moderate and high-risk injuries are escalated to a clinician within minutes
When this model is in place, the first 24 hours become an asset — not a liability.
The Bottom Line
Win the first 24 hours — and you control the outcome.
The injury is the same regardless of when you respond. The cost is not.