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Developing a Safety Program for the Workplace. Bryan W. Shaw, Ph.D. Agricultural Engineering Department Texas Agricultural Extension Service The Texas A&M System. Why Safety. Why Safety. Reduce Number of Injuries Reduce Costs Associated with Injuries Comply with Regulations. Why Safety.
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Developing a Safety Program for the Workplace Bryan W. Shaw, Ph.D. Agricultural Engineering Department Texas Agricultural Extension Service The Texas A&M System
Why Safety • Reduce Number of Injuries • Reduce Costs Associated with Injuries • Comply with Regulations
Why Safety • Reduce Number of Injuries • Reduce Costs Associated with Injuries • Comply with Regulations
Reduce Injury Costs • Average cost of injury -~$11,000 • Indirect cost ~ 50 times direct cost - Lost time/productivity, low morale - Equipment Damage
Why Safety • Reduce Number of Injuries • Reduce Costs Associated with Injuries • Comply with Regulations
OSHA Inspections Region VI • ~4,200 /year ~1/2 programmed • Average cost ~$2,500 – 17,000 • How often – once every 102 years • Landscape ~ 40% of violations were paperwork violations
Creating a Safety Program • Management commitment - Real commitment - Active participation • Assignment of Authority - Supervisors/foremen provide lead - Safety committee
Developing a Safety Program • Develop/implement safety policies and work rules - Policy should be brief, to the point and define management’s philosophy - Clear enforceable work rules - Require commitment to comply
Safety Rules • General - apply to all employees • Job specific safety rules - developed specifically for each major job activity
Developing a Safety Program • Orientation and Training -Orientation ~ familiarize new employees with safety policy and work rules -Provide regular training ~ refresh
Developing a Safety Program • Hazard Abatement - Schedule regular imspections - Document and correct unsafe conditions or practices - Encourage reporting of hazards - Develop safety procedures for new equipment
Developing a Safety Program • Commitment to injured workers - Healthy employees ~ productive - Let injured workers know that their needs are a priority
Developing a Safety Program • Injury statistics and reports - Keep records of all injuries - Use to evaluate safety needs - Use to identify hazards to eliminate
Employee Selection • Develop Job Application • Require all applicants to complete • Verify information on application • Use available sources to find additional information • Complete additional checks if job requires applicant to drive
Employee Selection • Request applicants to submit to physical examination • Request applicants to submit to drug tests • Verify paperwork complete before offer employment
Employee Orientation & Training • General • all employees • Job Specific • employees that perform specific task
Employee Orientation & Training • Keep records of topics covered • Require employees to sign roster • Short frequent meetings
Employee Orientation & Training • General ~ All employees • Policy and rules • Proper lifting • Ergonomics
Employee Orientation & Training • General ~ All employees • Policy and rules • Proper lifting • Ergonomics
Employee Orientation & Training • General ~ All employees • Policy and rules • Proper lifting • Ergonomics
Ergonomics • Ergo = work • Nomos = work • Ergonomics • Make work environment fit workers dimensions • Rotate employees • Working Smarter
Ergonomics • Machinery is often designed • Without considering human interface, or • To fit the average human • One size fits all
Ergonomics • Make equipment fit within limitations and capabilities of the worker
Ergonomics • Two types of Injuries • Instantaneous • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD)
Ergonomics • Instantaneous • Occurs as soon as the incident occurs • Most back injuries are coded as instantaneous
Ergonomics • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD) • Cumulative ~ occurring gradually • Trauma ~ bodily injury • Disorders ~ Physical ailments of abnormal conditions
Ergonomics • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD) • Force • Repetition • Posture • Lack of Rest
Ergonomics - Force • Find easier way • Use assistive devices • Get assistance
Ergonomics • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD) • Force • Repetition • Posture • Lack of Rest
Ergonomics - Repetition • Rethink task • Alter procedure to minimize repetition
Ergonomics • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD) • Force • Repetition • Posture • Lack of Rest
Ergonomics - Posture • Maintain good posture • Modify work environment to facilitate good posture
Ergonomics • Cumulative Trauma Disorders (CTD) • Force • Repetition • Posture • Lack of Rest
Ergonomics – Lack of Rest • Consider rotating employees • Rotation to task that stresses different muscle tendon group
Employee Orientation & Training • Specific – Specific employees • Chemical Handling/PPE • Mower Safety • Chain Saw Safety • Guards and Shields • Proper Lifting, etc.