Shift Worker & Night Shift Fatigue SWMS
Fatigue risk management for shift workers β roster design, circadian rhythm, night shift nutrition, napping policy, impairment detection, and accommodation support.
SWMS variants reference your stateβs WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.
Shift work and night shift operations expose workers to circadian rhythm disruption, sleep debt, and cognitive impairment equivalent to alcohol intoxication after 17+ hours awake. This SWMS addresses fatigue as a psychosocial and physical hazard across rotating rosters, fixed night shifts, on-call arrangements, and extended hours in sectors including healthcare, mining, manufacturing, logistics, and emergency services. Under WHS Act s.19, PCBUs hold a primary duty to manage fatigue-related risks so far as is reasonably practicable, with Safe Work Australia's Managing Psychosocial Hazards Code of Practice 2022 specifically naming shift design, workload, and recovery time as identified hazards. Failure to control fatigue has caused fatal vehicle incidents, medication errors, plant operation accidents, and long-term cardiovascular and mental health harm. This document gives PCBUs, schedulers, and supervisors a defensible framework for roster design, impairment monitoring, napping protocols, and worker consultation aligned with current Australian psychosocial risk obligations.
Hazards identified
11 hazards covered, sorted by priority.
Cognitive impairment equivalent to 0.05 BAC, increased microsleep events, elevated incident and near-miss rates on critical tasks
Chronic sleep disorder, gastrointestinal dysfunction, elevated cardiovascular disease risk, depression and anxiety onset over 6-24 month exposure
Drowsy driving collision risk peaking 4am-7am commute, fatalities classified as work-related under recent coronial findings
Error rates double after hour 10, decision-making capacity collapses, manual handling injuries increase due to reduced proprioception
Inadequate sleep opportunity, cumulative fatigue, breach of EBA fatigue clauses and ILO Convention 171 night work standards
Undetected microsleep on critical control tasks, delayed emergency response, isolation-driven psychological harm and reduced help-seeking
Glycaemic disruption, dehydration, caffeine-induced anxiety, sleep-onset insomnia perpetuating the fatigue cycle and metabolic syndrome
Sleep anticipation anxiety, family and social disruption, identified psychosocial hazard under Code of Practice 2022 Chapter 4
Phantom-call hypervigilance prevents deep sleep architecture, cumulative deficit not captured in worked-hours timesheets
Workers continue safety-critical tasks while impaired, breach of worker duty under WHS Act s.28, undermines fatigue management system
No defensible recovery option during shift, breach of WHS Reg facility provisions, increased presenteeism-driven errors
Control measures
Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β substitution β isolation β engineering β administrative β PPE.
- 1Elimination β Eliminate night shift work entirely where reasonably practicable by automating overnight processes, batching daytime production, or contracting 24/7 monitoring to dedicated operators with circadian-adapted rosters.
- 2Elimination β Remove safety-critical decision tasks (high-risk plant operation, medication dosing, financial authorisation) from the 2am-6am circadian low window through workflow redesign and task scheduling.
- 3Substitution β Substitute rapid backward-rotating rosters with forward-rotating patterns (morning β afternoon β night) allowing physiological adaptation per Safe Work Australia fatigue guidance.
- 4Substitution β Replace 12-hour rosters with 8-hour shifts where workload allows, particularly for tasks requiring sustained vigilance or fine motor control beyond hour 8.
- 5Engineering β Install circadian-tuned lighting (high-lux blue-enriched during shift, amber-shifted pre-departure) in shift workplaces to support alertness and post-shift sleep onset.
- 6Engineering β Provide dedicated nap rooms with blackout, climate control, and 20-minute timed wake systems aligned with NASA-validated power nap protocols for safety-critical worksites.
- 7Administrative β Design rosters with minimum 11-hour inter-shift breaks, maximum 4 consecutive night shifts, and 48-hour recovery before forward rotation, documented per Code of Practice 2022 risk assessment.
- 8Administrative β Implement fatigue self-assessment (Samn-Perelli or KSS scales) at shift start and pre-critical-task, with documented stand-down authority and no-blame reporting culture.
- 9Administrative β Provide post-shift transport (taxi, rideshare voucher, on-site accommodation) following night shifts exceeding 10 hours or where worker self-identifies impairment.
- 10PPE β Issue blue-light blocking glasses for post-shift commute and blackout sleep masks plus white noise devices for day-sleep workers, supported by sleep hygiene education modules.
Applicable Codes of Practice
Chapter 4 specifically identifies shift work, long hours, and fatigue as psychosocial hazards requiring risk assessment, control, and worker consultation under WHS Reg 55.
Provides PCBU duty interpretation for shift design, hours of work limits, and fatigue indicators discharging the s.19 primary duty of care.
Establishes PCBU obligation to ensure health and safety so far as reasonably practicable including fatigue, and worker duty to take reasonable care for own safety.
Clause 6.1.2 requires identification of work organisation hazards including shift patterns, workload, and recovery, supporting the systemised psychosocial risk management approach.
High-Risk Construction Work triggered
Not classified as HRCW under Schedule 1, however fatigue management remains an enforceable psychosocial duty under WHS Act s.19 with penalties substantial and indexed; current maximum follows the prevailing WHS schedule, plus worker consultation records under s.47-49 must be retained.
Who this is for
- βHealthcare rostering managers in hospitals and aged care
- βMining and FIFO shift schedulers and HSE leads
- βManufacturing and logistics 24/7 operations supervisors
- βEmergency services and security PCBUs managing night crews
What you receive
- βEditable DOCX template β Microsoft Word compatible
- βState-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
- βHazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
- βWorker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow
Worked example
At a regional distribution centre running a continuous 24/7 cross-dock operation, the afternoon supervisor convenes the 10pm pre-shift brief with six forklift operators and two pickers transitioning to a four-night block. Using this SWMS, the supervisor walks the team through the identified hazards page, highlighting that tonight is night three of four β the documented peak risk window for microsleep on powered mobile plant. Each worker completes the Samn-Perelli self-rating on the sign-on sheet; one operator scores 5 (moderately tired, let down), triggering the documented administrative control of reassignment from forklift duty to manual pick-pack until a 20-minute nap break at 2am in the on-site rest room. The supervisor confirms post-shift taxi vouchers are pre-loaded for two workers who flagged a 90-minute commute. At 3:15am, a near-miss occurs when a pallet is set down off-square. The supervisor pauses operations, references the SWMS during-task adjustment trigger, and rotates the team through an unscheduled 15-minute break with hydration and protein snacks per the night shift nutrition control. The incident, the KSS scores, the rotation decision, and the worker consultation are logged against this SWMS for the psychosocial risk register, demonstrating the s.19 duty discharge and Code of Practice 2022 consultation evidence trail.
Related legislation
- WHS Act 2011 (model)
- WHS Regulation 2025
- Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work CoP