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Toolbox presentation: Safety performance data 2004-05 and strain/sprain injuries. October 2006. 3. Reporting . Every person working on a mine must report:any potentially serious occurrenceany situation that could be a hazardany injury On receiving a report, the manager must:investigate the sit
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1. 1 Please read this before using presentation This presentation is based on content presented at the 2006 Mines Safety Roadshow held in October 2006
It is made available for non-commercial use (eg toolbox meetings) subject to the condition that the PowerPoint file is not altered without permission from Resources Safety
Supporting resources, such as brochures and posters, are available from Resources Safety
For resources, information or clarification, please contact:
ResourcesSafety@docep.wa.gov.au
or visit
www.docep.wa.gov.au/ResourcesSafety
2. Toolbox presentation: Safety performance data 2004-05 and strain/sprain injuries October 2006
3. 3 Reporting Every person working on a mine must report:
any potentially serious occurrence
any situation that could be a hazard
any injury
On receiving a report, the manager must:
investigate the situation
decide action to be taken
notify the person who made the report
4. 4 Data collected Resources Safety databases:
Fatalities (part available on Resources Safety website)
AXTAT (internal only, database may be queried upon request)
Incidents (part available on Resources Safety website)
Used to evaluate annual safety performance in the Western Australian mineral industry
Used to determine trends in accident and incident reporting that may assist industry in managing risks more effectively (see article in MineSafe vol. 14, no. 3)
5. 5 2004-05 statistics
6. 6 2004-05 statistics continued
7. 7 2004-05 statistics continued
8. 8 2004-05 statistics continued
9. 9 Priority areas for Resources Safety Risk management
encouraging management to actively identify and manage risks in the workplace
Safety culture
improving safety awareness and culture of the mining workforce
10. 10 DISCUSSION TOPIC:Reducing the risk of strains and sprains
11. 11 Strains and sprains — ten years of data
12. 12 Lost time injury frequency rates
13. 13 Lost time injury incidence rates
14. 14 Activity The graphs show that injury rates, including those for strain/sprain data, appear to have reached a plateau
Some strains or sprains can be debilitating and have a long-term impact (e.g. back injuries)
What can we do to continue a downward trend?
Consider your workplace
What hazards might contribute to strain/sprain injuries?
Analyse and assess the risk – what is the likelihood and what are the consequences?
How could the risk be reduced?