How Paralympians are changing workplace safety attitudes

There's one thing that's always guaranteed to happen when icare speaker Kahi Puru visits a workplace and that is the safety message he delivers will be personal, memorable and no holds barred.

Six men are in the photo wearing white polo t-shirts with the icare logo. Two sit in wheelchairs, 3 have visible artificial legs and another stands with crutches.

As part of icare's Paralympian Speakers Program, Paralympian weightlifter Kahi Puru recently visited team members at Australia-wide building supplier Dahlsens, sharing a cuppa in the tea-room along with the hard-won insights he gained after experiencing a life-changing forklift accident.

The medal-winning Aussie athlete has never taken his success on the international stage for granted and says in recent times, what has motivated him isn't winning gold but winning over the attention of at-risk workers with his powerful story.

Last month, the team at Dahlsens heard how unreported workplace hazards resulted in the loss of Kahi's leg and that the painful journey to recovery impacted not just Kahi but his workmates, friends, family, and community.

Kahi shares his story not to cause alarm but to let workers know that no matter who they are and what role they hold, every individual in a team can make a difference to the safety of themselves and colleagues.

"Accidents can happen to anyone, at any time. Sometimes people with decades of experience in driving or operating a machine can slip up. Sometimes it's the inexperienced staff. My message is for everyone in the workplace to play their part," Kahi said.

Kahi Puru wears a high-vis yellow shirt with icare and Paralympics Australia logo. He stands with the use of braces in a work breakout room with five workers in orange high-vis jumpers and jackets on, they sit at a table with a tray of biscuits and fruit in front of them. A small kitchen is visible and a pinup board is at the back with a number of items including RUOK, National Diabetes and safety messaging.

The weightlifter encourages workers to listen carefully to safety training and speak up whenever they identify a risk, no matter how small.

"Let's all play safe! It's a really positive message for workers," he says.

"And the aim of sharing my real-life story is so the businesses I visit can really deeply engage their teams on the importance of workplace health and safety."

Kahi's message resonated deeply with Nicole Iannazzone, Injury Manager at Dahlsens, who said it deeply aligned with the wider program of safety training and awareness they had developed over several years.

“Kahi's story deeply resonated with our team and will stay in our memories for many years to come. By Kahi sharing his story, one of our team may make a safer choice at work which could very well prevent a life-altering injury from happening in the future.”
Nicole Iannazzone, Injury Manager at Dahlsens

Kahi went on to compete at the Sydney 2000 Paralympics and now travels around NSW as part of the Speakers Program, sharing his unique stories of workplace injury to help support a culture of safety at work to drive down workplace injuries and showing that a return to work and a return to life after injury is possible.

"I was a young man with a young family when I had my accident at work. I've experienced first-hand how devastating a workplace injury can be, not just for you, but also for your family and your friends," said Kahi.

icare's Paralympian Speakers Program

icare's Speakers Program was a great way to spread the message of workplace health and safety.

Chris Harnett, icare's General Manager Prevention, said icare's Speakers Program was a great way to spread the message of workplace health and safety.

"Stories like Kahi's bring home the 'why?' around injury prevention. Our ability to empathise is integral to our desire to take action to help others. Emotions are important because they motivate us. Knowing something is useful, but feeling that knowledge is what drives the impetus to act."

"With 53 workers killed in workplace accidents in 2021*, education, training and tools are crucial in building a safer work environment," Mr Harnett said.

icare's Paralympian Speakers Program is run in partnership with Paralympics Australia and is free for icare customers.

Find out more about the Paralympian Speakers Program


* Key Work health and safety statistics, Australia 2021