All industries
Logistics & transport
Keeping your supply chain moving when injuries happen
Logistics and transport operations run on tight margins and tighter schedules. When a worker is injured — whether in a warehouse, on a delivery run, or behind the wheel — the clock starts on clinical care, documentation, and return-to-work planning.
43%
Reduction in claim duration
72%
RTW within 4 weeks
3 states
Covered concurrently
2,500+
Workers managed
Common injuries
The injury profiles we see most frequently in logistics & transport workplaces.
- Back and shoulder injuries from manual handling and lifting
- Knee and ankle injuries from warehouse operations
- Driving-related injuries — whiplash, vibration, and postural strain
- Slip, trip, and fall injuries in depot and warehouse environments
- Fatigue-related incidents from long-haul and shift work
- Psychological injuries from road incidents and work pressure
Industry challenges
What makes injury management in logistics & transport harder than it should be.
- Geographically dispersed workforce across multiple states
- High physical demands limiting suitable duties options
- Driver-specific medical requirements and fitness-for-duty considerations
- Seasonal volume peaks increasing injury risk and absence impact
- Multiple insurer relationships across different state operations
How we help
What we do for logistics & transport employers
- Nationwide clinical coverage — metro, regional, and interstate
- Same-day triage regardless of which depot or route the injury occurred on
- Clinicians who understand transport-specific fitness-for-duty requirements
- Telehealth for follow-ups that keep long-haul and regional workers connected
- Suitable duties planning mapped to warehouse, delivery, and driving roles
- Single documentation standard across all state operations
Ready to improve injury outcomes in logistics & transport?
Tell us about your workforce and we'll outline a clinical pathway that fits.
