1. The scale of Korean workplace injury
| Metric | Number |
|---|---|
| Annual workplace deaths | 800–900 (812 in 2023) |
| Serious incidents (death / severe injury) | 2,000+/yr |
| OECD workplace mortality | #1 (4.4 per 100,000) |
| Social cost (GDP) | 1.7–2.5% |
| Main industries | Construction 35%, manufacturing 28%, services 12% |
2. 4 pathways of occupational PTSD
① The injured worker
- PTSD 30–40% (Vlahov 2002, Kwon Joon-soo 2018 Korea)
- Permanent disability, chronic pain, identity loss
- Rumination: "why was it me that day?"
- Fear of returning to work (trigger)
- Household economy collapses → accelerating depression
② Coworker witnesses
- PTSD 50%+ (when witnessing death / severe injury)
- "If only I had done more" guilt
- Fear of the next incident
- Loss of safety trust → job change
- Pressure for company / coworker confidentiality → silencing
③ Family (in case of death)
- Bereaved depression 80% (SNU 2020 study of the Kim Yong-gyun bereaved, etc.)
- Bereaved suicide risk ×3
- Effects on children's schooling and mental health
- Multi-year legal processes → chronic trauma
- Social secondary harm: "why were they working?"
④ Moral injury
- "I didn't speak up about safety"
- "The company knew and ignored it"
- "I couldn't save them" during rescue
- Anger at managerial evasion
3. Korean socially shocking incidents (socialization of occupational PTSD)
- 2008 Icheon cold-storage fire: 40 dead → occupational-PTSD awareness begins
- 2014 Sewol: not strictly occupational, but crew / rescuer PTSD
- 2018 Kim Yong-gyun (24, Taean power plant): crushed in conveyor → Kim Yong-gyun Act (OSH Act amendment)
- 2020 Icheon Hanik Express logistics fire: 38 dead
- 2022 SPC Pyeongtaek (23, hand cut off → death): youth-injury awareness
- 2024 Aricell Hwaseong (23 deaths, foreign workers): the blind spot of foreign-worker injuries
4. Mental-illness workers'-comp approval
The Korea Workers' Compensation Welfare Service (KCOMWEL) has covered "work-related mental illness" since 2003. Reality:
| Category | Approval rate |
|---|---|
| Physical workers' comp | 90%+ |
| Work-related mental illness (overall) | 30% |
| Work-related suicide | 30–40% |
| Post-trauma PTSD | 40% |
| Work-stress depression | 20% |
Why it is hard to be approved
- The burden of proving "work-relatedness" falls on the worker
- Common denial via "individual predisposition (personality, prior mental illness)"
- Requires medical opinions, testimony, work-environment documentation
- If denied at first, reappeals and administrative lawsuits (1–3 years)
5. 5-step recovery
Step 1: file workers' comp (immediately after incident)
- Apply at KCOMWEL (1588-0075)
- 3-year statute of limitations
- Consult a workers'-comp-specialized lawyer / labor-affairs consultant
- For mental-illness workers' comp, the worker must prove — preserve data: work hours, job content, coworker testimony
Step 2: emergency psychiatric evaluation (within 1 month)
- Psychiatric outpatient clinic
- PCL-5 (PTSD), PHQ-9 (depression), GAD-7 (anxiety) assessment
- Medication (SSRIs, anxiolytics) as needed
- In acute crisis, 1577-0199
Step 3: trauma processing (3 months – 2 years)
- EMDR / CPT / PE (prolonged exposure)
- University-hospital trauma clinic
- Moral-injury evaluation
- Family evaluation accompanying
Step 4: peer-support groups
- Local injured-worker groups
- Kim Yong-gyun Foundation, Icheon-fire bereaved group, etc.
- Periodic meetings with coworkers from the same incident
- Online self-help groups
Step 5: gradual return
- Full recovery 6 months – 3 years
- On return, "injured-worker protection" applies (no dismissal, gradual adaptation)
- If returning to the same department / task is frightening, negotiate transfer
- If looking for a new job, vocational rehabilitation (KCOMWEL support)
6. Resources
- KCOMWEL 1588-0075: claims, rehabilitation
- Korea Institute of Labor Safety and Health: materials, legal counsel
- Kim Yong-gyun Foundation: bereaved support
- Korean Association of Certified Labor Consultants: workers'-comp specialists
- Minbyun / law-firm workers'-comp teams: workers'-comp specialist lawyers
- Industrial-Trauma Support Centers: in some metro cities (Seoul, Busan, Ulsan, etc.)
- Foreign-worker counseling centers: foreign-worker injuries
- 1577-0199 / 1393: suicide crisis
7. What family / coworkers can do
- Never blame with "why that day?"
- Accompany them through workers'-comp filing (complex)
- Accompany them to psychiatry (hard to go alone)
- In economic crisis, see CCRS (article #237)
- Recognize suicide signs (article #231 gatekeeper)
- Report company retaliation to union / labor office
8. To companies and managers
Common company patterns after an incident (evasion, blaming "individual carelessness", settlement pressure) deepen moral injury. True safety recovery:
- Immediate formal acknowledgment and apology
- Support every procedure for bereaved / injured-worker families
- Coworker PTSD evaluation / treatment costs covered by the company
- Public root-cause review and improvement of safety systems
- 1- and 5-year follow-ups