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Why 56% of Workers Are Alone Every Day with Nick Brown from SafetyCulture

46 minutes

RapidSOS and SafetyCulture discuss lone worker safety technology. Learn how mobile apps and panic buttons protect healthcare providers and remote workers, featuring a powerful rescue story.

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Fifty-six percent of workers spend time working alone every single day. If that statistic surprises you, it shouldn’t. The definition of “lone worker” extends far beyond the obvious examples of field technicians or delivery drivers. It includes anyone working out of sight or sound of colleagues, even temporarily.

Nick Brown from SafetyCulture puts it simply.

"If I had a medical incident now, how long until my employer realized something was wrong?"

That question should make every business leader pause.

The scope of lone working has exploded. Remote workers sitting alone at home desks qualify. Retail employees increasingly work solo shifts due to staffing pressures. Real estate agents show properties to strangers. Healthcare workers provide in-home care to unfamiliar patients. The list goes on.

Post-Covid, the risks have intensified. Brown notes that

"...we're seeing a prevalence and the frequency of frontline worker violence following Covid really continue to increase pretty significantly."

Retail violence incidents climb year after year. The world feels different now, and workers feel it too.

The business case for lone worker protection extends beyond safety compliance. Companies are discovering it serves as a powerful recruitment and retention tool. “What are we doing that the organization down the road directly competing with us for employees isn’t doing?” Brown asks. In today’s tight labor market, lone worker safety becomes an employee benefit that sets companies apart.

The technology solution combines mobile apps with Bluetooth panic buttons, creating multiple ways for workers to signal distress. When triggered, alerts flow through monitoring centers to verify emergencies before escalating to managers or emergency services. This filtering prevents false alarms while ensuring genuine emergencies get rapid response.

One healthcare organization implemented lone worker technology for their home health team visiting patients. Later, they expanded it to their telehealth hub. During a night shift, a telehealth worker suffered a medical emergency while alone at their desk.

The system's automatic check-in feature detected the missed response within three minutes, enabling immediate medical intervention at the hospital site.

That story illustrates the hidden reality. Companies often discover more incidents after implementing lone worker solutions, not because conditions worsen, but because they finally capture what was always happening in the shadows.

The investment pays dividends beyond safety metrics. It demonstrates genuine care for frontline workers who drive business results. It creates competitive advantage in talent acquisition. Most importantly, it transforms mobile devices from communication tools into comprehensive safety platforms.