Occupational Health Grants in Australia: Funding Safe and Healthy Workplaces

Australian workers lose approximately 200 lives to work-related injuries and over 5,000 to work-related diseases every year. Occupational diseases — particularly dust-related lung diseases (silicosis, mesothelioma), noise-induced hearing loss, and occupational cancers — add a substantial additional burden. Safe Work Australia estimates the total economic cost of work-related injury and illness at over $28 billion annually. Grant funding supports workplace health promotion, occupational disease research, dust disease support, agricultural safety, and the policy advocacy that makes Australian workplaces safer.

Occupational health in Australia

The burden

  • Approximately 200 work-related fatalities per year (injuries)
  • Approximately 5,000+ deaths from occupational diseases annually (cancer, respiratory)
  • Over 100,000 serious workers compensation claims per year
  • Silicosis: re-emerging epidemic in stonemasons working with engineered stone (benchtops)
  • Asbestos-related disease: mesothelioma deaths continue from historic asbestos exposure

High-risk sectors

  • Construction: falls, machinery, silica exposure
  • Agriculture: machinery accidents, chemical exposure, mental health
  • Mining: dust exposure, noise, fatigue
  • Transport: long hours, fatigue
  • Healthcare: needlestick injuries, violence, psychological hazards

Emerging issues

  • Silicosis from engineered stone: rapid growth in cases among young stonemasons
  • Workplace mental health: psychosocial hazards under new WHS regulations
  • Gig economy: OHS protections unclear for gig workers
  • Climate change: heat stress for outdoor workers

Government occupational health funding

Safe Work Australia

National policy body — research, statistics, model laws.

State and Territory WHS Regulators

  • WorkSafe Victoria
  • SafeWork NSW
  • WorkCover Queensland
  • Etc. — enforcement and some funding

Comcare

Commonwealth workers compensation and WHS.

Department of Agriculture

Agricultural safety programmes.

Philanthropic occupational health funders

Asbestos Safety and Eradication Agency

Asbestos-related disease research and safety.

Dust Disease Board NSW

Support for workers with dust diseases.

Silicosis Support Network

Peer support for people with silicosis.

Lung Foundation Australia

Lung health including occupational lung disease.

Various workers compensation insurers

Some fund injury prevention and early return to work.

Types of funded occupational health programmes

Silicosis and engineered stone

  • Silicosis research (incidence, progression, treatment)
  • Stonemason health surveillance
  • Silica dust exposure measurement
  • Wet working methods promotion
  • Regulatory advocacy (engineered stone ban — achieved in 2024)

Asbestos-related disease

  • Mesothelioma support
  • Asbestos disease research
  • Asbestos awareness education (for trades and homeowners)
  • Asbestos removal safety

Agricultural safety

  • Farm injury prevention (machinery, chemical)
  • Mental health on farms (financial stress, isolation)
  • Agricultural machinery safety
  • Young farm worker safety

Mining health

  • Dust monitoring and exposure reduction
  • Noise-induced hearing loss prevention
  • Fatigue management
  • FIFO (fly-in-fly-out) worker health

Workplace mental health

  • Psychological safety in workplaces
  • Return to work for mental health conditions
  • Manager training in mental health support
  • Fatigue risk management

Occupational cancer

  • Outdoor worker UV exposure (skin cancer)
  • Occupational carcinogen exposure surveillance
  • Bladder cancer in chemical workers
  • Respiratory cancer from occupational exposures

Construction safety

  • Falls prevention on construction sites
  • Young worker safety
  • Fatigue in construction
  • Manual handling and musculoskeletal injury

Healthcare worker safety

  • Needlestick injury prevention
  • Occupational violence in health settings
  • Burnout and fatigue in healthcare workers
  • Musculoskeletal injuries in healthcare

Research

  • Occupational epidemiology
  • Occupational disease burden
  • Intervention research
  • Economic impact of occupational injury

Silicosis: Australia's re-emerging crisis

Silicosis — scarring of the lung from crystalline silica dust — was thought largely eliminated in Australia. But the stonemason industry's shift to engineered stone (composite kitchen and bathroom benchtops with 90%+ silica content) created a new epidemic:
- Young stonemasons developing severe, accelerating silicosis
- Deaths of workers in their 20s and 30s
- 2024: engineered stone effectively banned from Australia's workplaces

The engineered stone silicosis crisis illustrates how new materials can create new occupational disease risks — and how advocacy and research can drive regulatory change.

Grant application considerations

Emerging occupational hazards

Occupational health grants that target emerging hazards — silica in new materials, psychosocial risks under new WHS regulations, heat stress from climate change — are addressing risks before they become widespread.

Research translation

Occupational health research is strong in Australia (universities, NHMRC) but translation to workplace practice is slow. Applications bridging research and practice — implementation, training, toolkits — are high-value.

Agricultural mental health

Farmer mental health is a significant occupational health issue (financial stress, isolation, drought). Applications linking agricultural safety with mental health are comprehensive.

Equity in coverage

Gig and informal workers are excluded from traditional workers compensation and OHS protections. Applications addressing safety for these workers fill a genuine policy gap.


Tahua's grants management platform supports occupational health funders and workplace safety organisations — with programme reach tracking, incident reduction data, worker health outcome measurement, and the reporting tools that help occupational health funders demonstrate their investment in safe and healthy Australian workplaces.

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