Get New Insights for World Day for Safety and Health at Work

Join the movement of advocating for safe and healthy working environments. Each year on April 28, the annual World Day for Safety and Health at Work gives us a chance to focus on how we can reduce and prevent occupational accidents and diseases globally.
ICMI are proud to have a number of passionate, experienced speakers who focus on occupational health and safety. They can come to your event on April 28 and share their insights on how to promote and create a safer, healthier workplace culture with powerful lessons for everyone, from business leaders to employees.
Theo Venter
Workplace safety advocate and survivor, Theo Venter is the only person in the world to have survived 22,000 volts of electricity during an accident while working as an electrical lineman. Since then, Theo has shared his story of courage, determination and brutal honesty about the importance and stakes involved in workplace safety.
Natalee Johnston
As the Navy’s first female pilot, Natalee Johnston has a unique perspective to share on the importance of workplace safety. She believes that safety and organisational culture are intertwined because they have such a huge influence on each other. Her workplace safety presentations focus on helping businesses understand this link and how identifying when they are failing can save both businesses and lives.
Alan Newey
Workplace accident survivor and Australia’s first ‘bionic’ man, Alan Newey lost his right dominant arm to a conveyor belt accident. After many years of recovery and rehabilitation, Alan is now the director of Chat Safety and provides presentations on the impact of workplace accidents on individuals and their families.
Helen Fitzroy OAM
Author and workplace safety advocate Helen Fitzroy OAM lost her husband in a mining accident, leaving her with three young children under the age of seven. She has since advocated for worker safety and established Miners Promise, a non-profit to support workers and their families in the resources sector affected by workplace accidents. As a speaker, her presentations focus on the ‘ripple effect’ of a workplace fatality to highlight the importance of safety at work.
Phil Smallman
An injured worker with more than 24 years in a wheelchair, Phil Smallman helps organisations understand the ‘why’ of safety through living the ‘costs’ associated with injury. This includes both financial and other costs to the individuals, their families and the organisations they work for, helping shift attitudes to safety and creating a positive workplace culture around safety.
Book one of these exceptional speakers for World Day for Safety and Health at Work. Call us now on 1800 334 625 or make an enquiry online.