Safety
Management
Concpets
Evolution of
modern concepts of safety:
Heinrich
principle:
Any accident can be preventable.
Heinrich
triangle:
After
investigating many incidents
Heinrich
proposed that for every 300
Near
misses there will be 29 minor
Injury
cases and one major injury
It
might occur in any possible way i.e
the
first might be a major one.
Three
reasons for unsafe acts are:
1. Attitude
2.
Technical skills / knowledge
4. Condition
Techniques
of accident prevention are:
1. Engineering
2.
Education
3.
Enforcement
4. Enthusiasm
In modern
concepts Evaluation is added as one
of the accident prevention technique
Principles
of safety management:
1. Safety
is an important management function of every organization
2.
Accidents are caused by unsafe acts and
unsafe conditions
3.
Behind one accident there are several
near misses
4.
Unsafe acts and unsafe conditions can be
identified in advance and eliminated at the root.
5. For
achieving ultimate safety, each link in the safety chain must be healthful.
Safety Policy
Necessity
of safety policy:
1. Management Commitment to
Safety
2. Organisation and
Arrangements for controlling work
related hazards
3. Protect people from injury
and ill-health
4. Comply with legal
requirements
5. Manage health and safety on
a cost effective basis
How is safety
policy framed?
There
are three elements of safety policy they are:
1. Statement
of Intent
2.
Organization
3. Arrangements
Statement of
Intent:
Statement of intent states the target or goal
which is set and that is to be achieved.
How
do you set a target?
A
target is set according to SMART concept
The
goal which is set shall be:
S
–Specific
M-
Measurable
A-
Achievable
R
– Reasonable
T
– Time bound
Organization:
Organization is
formed by the different levels of management and employees. The goals of an
organization shall be set according to the policy set by the management. A
organization chart will determine the flow of authority. In a good organization
there shall be one and only one superior.
All the employees hired shall be competent.
Competent means
a person who has Knowledge, Ability, Training and Experience (KATE).
A good
organization can be determined by following characteristics:
1. Coordination
and Control.
Policies, Organisational development, Planning, Auditing, Monitoring, Reviewing
2.
Communication
Management involvement, Information systems, Documentation, Liaison, Team briefings, Tool box
Talks.
3. Cooperation
Health and Safety meetings,
Team briefings, Problem solving meetings
4. Competence
Staff selection, Training, Supervision
Failing
in any one of the above characteristics the organization fails to achieve the
goals.
Arrangements:
Set out in detail the
specific systems and procedures for implementing the safety policy
•Risk Assessments
•COSHH Assessments
•Emergency Arrangements e.g. Fire, First Aid,
•Written Procedures, e.g. SSOW, Permits
•Training Programmes, e.g. Manual Handling, DSE, Fork Lift
Trucks
•Maintenance Information
•Information/Consultation
•Personal Protective Equipment
The
safety Policy shall be signed by the top level management (like a vice chairman
or general manager ) in general would be a occupier. This will show the
management commitment and gives the policy authority. Person who signgs it has
ultimate responsibility.
Communicating
Safety policy:
Employers must bring the policy to Employees
attention. This can be done by:
•
Displaying it on
notice boards
•
Introducing it
on induction and training session
•
Considering it
on team briefings and tool box talks
•
Using
newsletters
•
Inserts in wage
slips
•
Posters
•
Build into safe
systems and codes of practice
•
Managers to
discuss with workforce
Ineffective Health
& Safety Policies
•
No commitment or
leadership
•
No annual
objectives
•
Health and
Safety not given enough priority
•
Insufficient
resources provided
•
Personnel do not
understand aims
•
Too much
emphasis on employee responsibility
•
No measure of
performance
•
Management unaware
of their role
•
No training of
management in their responsibilities
When shall the
Safety Policy shall be reviewed:
a) Accidents
/ Incidents occurs
b) Changes
in Organisation
c) Processes
change
d) Materials
e) Premises
extended or changed.
f) Legislation
changes
g) Work
Patterns changes
h) Ineffective
Risk Assessments
i) Following
Accident Investigation
j) Enforcement
Action
k) Policy
Review
l) Professional
Advise
Safety
Organization:
Safety
organization developed by following hirearchy
Policy (H&S
policy, Target, Goals)
Organising (leadership, competence, consultation & communication)
Planning (H&S
equal priority)
Measuring performance (targets, proactive monitoring, no-blame culture, inspection and
sampling, site survey)
Review and Audit (learning from mistakes)
Organization
is to identify health and safety responsibilities and reporting lines within
the company.
Directors and Senior Managers –setting policy and objectives
Line Managers –Implementing policy in their department
Supervisors –Checking compliance with the policy
Safety Advisors – advising Company on accident and safety
compliance
Employees –Responsibility for own and others safety
Fire Marshals –Ensure evacuation of building and roll calls
First
Aiders–to provide first aid
In
every organization there shall be clear set or roles and responsibilities
Management’s Responsibilities for Employees
1. Safe plant and
equipment
2. Information, instruction, and training
3. Supervision
4. Safe place of work and access and egress
5. Safe environment and welfare facilities
6. Safety policy
7. Consult and inform employeesRisk Assessments
8. Effective
health and safety management
9. Competent
health and safety assistance
10.
Health and surveillance
11.
Serious and imminent danger
Management is also responsible for non
employees and they include:
1. Contractors
2. Visitors
3. General public
4. Other employees
5. Trespassers
Precautions for visitors safety
•
Signing in
•
Providing
identification badges
•
Providing PPE
•
Site induction
e.g. Fire precautions
•
Escorting
visitor to area of work
•
Remain with
visitor or regular monitoring
•
Escorting
visitor back to reception area
•
Signing out
visitor and removing badge
Duties of Employees
a) Not to endanger themselves and others
b) Co-operation with their employer
c) Not to interfere with anything provided for safety
d) Follow instructions and training given
e) Inform Employer of dangers and problems with health
and safety arrangements
Designers,
Manufacturers, Suppliers and Importers
1. Articles must be
designed and constructed to be safe when being set, used, cleaned,
maintained
2.
Substances must be safe when being used, handled, processed, stored or transported
3.
Carry out and
arrange tests
4.
Provide
revisions if necessary
5. Installers and Erectors must be competent
Safety Practitioners should have:
1) Knowledge
and understanding of the work involved
2) Understand
principles of risk assessment
3) Knowledge
of current health and safety applications
4) Capacity to
apply to tasks required
5) Ability to
identify problems
6) Ability to
assessing the need for action
7) Ability to
design and develop strategies
8) Evaluation
of effectiveness of strategies
9) Promoting
and communication health and safety
10) Understanding of current best practice
10) Awareness of own limitations
11) Willingness to learn
12) Membership of a professional body
13) Competence based qualifications
Role of Safety Practitioner
Safety is both line and staff function
Staff
functions are:
1. Provide Information and Advice
2.
Support Line
Management with Co-ordination of Health and Safety Effort
3. Advise Management
4. Investigate accidents
5. Record/Analyse accident Data
6. Assist with Training
Line functions are:
1. Monitor Effectiveness of Actions to meet
Responsibilities
2.
Identify
Hazards, Unsafe acts and unsafe conditions.
3. Carry out inspections
4. Liaison with Workforce
Management
Strategy for Contractors
•
Identification of suitable bidders
•
Identification of hazards of job
•
Checking (health and safety aspects) of bids
•
Contractors agree to clients rules
•
Managing Contractors on site
•
Checking contractors work
Selecting a
Contractor
•
Experience with
type of work
•
Reputation
•
Suitable
references or recommendation
•
Previous work
record
•
Adequacy of
safety policy
•
Enforcement
history
•
Accident and ill
health data
•
Membership of
trade organisations
•
Suitable
training for employees
•
Arrangements for
sub-contractors
•
Suitable risk
assessments etc.
Safety Committees Objectives and Functions
The agenda should consist of:
1. Study of statistics
2. Examination audit reports
3. Safety rep. reports
4. Monitor safe systems etc.
5. Effectiveness of training
6. Health and safety communications
7. Links with appropriate Inspectors
Effectiveness
of Committee
•
Clear terms of
reference
•
Balanced
representation
•
Influence in
decision making
•
Respect of
management/workforce
•
Commitment from
members
•
Good leadership
and chairmanship
•
Good
communication channels
•
Access to
information/specialist advice
•
Formalised procedures
with agendas
•
Relevant (non
trivial) agenda items
•
Agenda not led
by industrial relations
Budgeting for
safety:
For carrying out safety functions a
separate budget to be allocated for safety from the managements. This budget
will involve the following:
1. Hardware
2. Labor
safety and health protection
3. Emergency
purpose
4. Safety
training and promotion
5. Routine
safety activities
6. Safety
management systems
7. Travelling
and accommodation.
Incident
Recall Technique (IRT)
Necessity for IRT is to eliminate or
reduce unwanted events such as human suffering, material damage, liability
claims, product loses, reputation loss, loss of claims.
How to conduct IRT
1. Select
the appropriate person for interaction
2. Interview
time (length of the session shall not take more time)
3. Stop
fault finding
4. Prepare
a checklist for what is about to be asked
5. Put
the person at ease.
6. Explain
the importance of recall technique.
7. Discuss
the possible causes and recommendations
8. Review
the understanding
For conducting IRT we shall maintain
privacy and there shall be no distraction from the topic.
Safety
Inspection
Safety
inspections are a basic tool for establishing and maintaining safe conditions
and discovering unsafe practices in the workplace. Systematic inspections are
practical ways to identify and correct unsafe equipment, conditions, processes,
and work practices. If unsafe conditions and practices are found to exist,
prompt corrective actions are initiated. They are an excellent way to prevent
accidents from occurring and to safeguard employees.
An
additional benefit occurring from inspections is that they give employees an
opportunity to point out deficiencies in their area that may otherwise go
unnoticed and uncorrected. Safety inspections are conducted primarily not to
find out how many things are wrong, but rather, to determine if things are
satisfactory. Their secondary purpose is to discover conditions that, when
corrected, will bring the facility up to accepted and approved standards and/or
regulations. As a consequence, the inspected facilities should become safer and
more healthful places to work.
Safety
Inspection can be carried out by and individual or a team with the use of
checklists or other inspection tools.
Effective Safety
Inspection
There are
several factors necessary for effective safety inspection. The inspection team
must:
• Be
selective. An inspection team might look over the department first for
safety and second for improvement of operations.
• Know what
to look for. The more a team knows about a job and a worker’s responsibilities,
the more effectively the team members can observe.
• Practice
observing. The more often a person looks with the conscious intention to
observe, the more they will see at each fresh look. Like all skills, observation
improves with practice.
• Keep an
open mind. One way to increase open-mindedness is not to prejudge facts.
Team inspectors must accept facts, no matter what conclusion they may find.
Each inspector must keep an open mind at least until all the facts are in.
• Do not be
satisfied with first impressions. A clean shop or a careful routine may
still contain hidden hazards.
• Guard
against habit and familiarity. Asking the questions what, where, who, how,
when, and (especially) why often will help uncover the real meaning of the
situation.
• Record
observations systematically. Date all notes. Include space for comments on
actions taken and on results of the actions taken.
• Use a
checklist. A systematic check for litter, obstructions, handling of flammables,
condition of fire-fighting equipment, and so on, can help uncover tangible problems
to correct. But never rely exclusively on a checklist!
Starting the
Inspection
There are three
basic steps for conducting an inspection:
1. Contact the
department head and solicit his or her help.
2. Observe all
conditions for compliance with established standards (use checklist).
3. Observe all operations for any unsafe
acts or violations of safety rules.
Safety Surveys
Wherever there
is a suspected hazard, conduct a special inspection to determine the extent of
the risk and the precautions or mechanical safeguarding needed to provide and
maintain healthy conditions. Follow up to these inspections usually requires
air sampling for the presence of toxic fumes, gases, and dusts, testing of
materials for toxic properties, or testing of ventilation and exhaust systems
for proper operation.
Safety
Audit
A
safety audit is a structured, methodical assessment and evaluation of how
workplace activities affect safety and health. It reveals how an organization
is doing in maintaining a safe and healthy environment. Its goal is to ensure a
safe and healthy workplace by striving to eliminate unsafe practices and
hazards that lead to injuries and accidents.
There
are two types of audits:
1.
External : These are conducted by a third party
2. Internal : Corporate : By headquarters or personnel from other units of the
same company.
An
audit is not for fault finding, it is for fact finding and it should identify
the strengths as well as the weaknesses of a program. It should reveal to
management and the employees where and how they could and should make
improvements. On-site audits require three main actions. First, arrange
interviews with facility personnel who have key roles in developing or
implementing safety management systems. Next, review documentation that defines
safety system records or verifies completion of critical tasks. These tasks may
include emergency preparedness; hazard identification, control, and monitoring;
and safety education and training.
Objectives of
Safety Audit
1. Verify compliance with established standards
(regulations, internal policies and industry wise standards of practice )
2. Identify deviation from designed and planned
operating and maintenance procedure and standards
3. Identify plant condition or operating procedures
that could lead to an accident and significant losses to life or property
4. Ensure that the plan and operating and maintenance
procedures match the design intent and standards.
5. Keep the operating personnel alert to the process
hazards
6. Review operating procedures for necessary revisions
7. Seek to identify equipment or process changes that
could have introduced new hazards
8. Ultimate application of new technology to existing
hazards
9. Review adequacy of safety inspections
10.
Look for major
risk situations recommend measures to improve overall safety performance of the
plant
Assessing
Strengths and Weaknesses :
In assessing strengths of
internal controls, auditors look for the following indications.
1. Whether factory personnel are trained and
experienced
2. Whether responsibilities at various levels are
clearly defined and carefully assigned.
3. Whether duties are so divided that these minimize
conflicts of interest
4. Whether authorization systems are in existence
5. Whether internal verification procedures are in
place
6. Whether protective measures-security systems and
alarms are taken
7. Whether procedures and compliance / exception
results are in place
For each of the areas assigned, the auditor should
ask himself the following questions :
1. If the facility is doing everything the way they say
it happens, is that acceptable?
2. Is the facility incompliance with applicable
requirements and is the factory adequately protected?
Management System
The essential elements of
safety management system to be audited are given below:
1 ) Safety,
Health & Environment ( SHE ) Policy
i) Management’s commitment to SHE
ii) Accountability
and Responsibility
iii) Implementation
iv) Policy review
2 ) Safety
and Health Organizational Set-up
3 ) Education
and Training
4 )
Communication / Motivation / Promotion in Safety
5 ) Safety
Inspections
6) Maintenance
of Accident Statistics and its Utilization
7) Previous
reports of Safety Audits
8) Personal Protective Equipments 9) Process
/ Plant Modification Procedure
10) Safe Operating Procedure
11) Work Permit System
i) Line breaking
ii) Confined space entry
iii) Hot work
iv) Electrical lockout and tag
system
v) Excavation
vi) Working at height
vii) Working on fragile
12) Fire
Fighting System
i) Selection of fire fighting
equipment
ii) Fire fighting
procedures
iii) Fire fighting team
iv) Communication system
v) Drills
vi) Inspection and maintenance of
fire fighting equipment
13) Health and Safety Improvement Plan / Targets
14) Prevention of Occupational Diseases
15) Work Environment Monitoring System
16) Medical Examination
i) Pre-employment
ii) Periodical
17) Material Safety Data Sheets
18) Emergency Preparedness Plan
( On-site / off-site )
19) Hazardous Waste Treatment and Disposal
19) Hazardous Waste Treatment and Disposal
20) Transportation of Hazardous
Materials
21) Hazard
Identification
22)
Contractor Safety Systems
24) New
Equipment Review / Inspection
Job Safety
Analysis (JSA)
There
are five steps for doing JSA
1. Select
the Job
2.
Divide the job into job steps or tasks
3.
Identify hazards in each task
4.
Evaluate the risks and decide whether
existing precautions are adequate or more should be done.
5. Identify
the responsible person to take action.
Safety Sampling
It
is a management tool for making the workplace safer by studying how processes
and people operate. By studying unsafe behaviors future accidents can be
avoided.
Disaster Control
Types of disasters
There is no country that is immune
from disaster, though vulnerability to disaster varies. There are four main
types of disaster.
·
Natural
disasters: including floods, hurricanes, earthquakes and volcano eruptions that
have immediate impacts on human health and secondary impacts causing further death
and suffering from (for example) floods, landslides, fires, tsunamis.
·
Environmental
emergencies: including technological or industrial accidents, usually involving
the production, use or transportation of hazardous material, and occur where
these materials are produced, used or transported, and forest fires caused by
humans.
·
Complex
emergencies: involving a break-down of authority, looting and attacks on
strategic installations, including conflict situations and war.
·
Pandemic
emergencies: involving a sudden onset of contagious disease that affects
health, disrupts services and businesses, brings economic and social costs.
Any disaster can interrupt essential
services, such as health care, electricity, water, sewage/garbage removal,
transportation and communications. The interruption can seriously affect the
health, social and economic networks of local communities and countries.
Disasters have a major and long-lasting impact on people long after the
immediate effect has been mitigated. Poorly planned relief activities can have
a significant negative impact not only on the disaster victims but also on
donors and relief agencies. So it is important that physical therapists join
established programmes rather than attempting individual efforts.
Local, regional, national and
international organizations are all involved in mounting a humanitarian
response to disasters. Each will have a prepared disaster management plan.
These plans cover prevention, preparedness, relief and recovery.
Disaster prevention
These are activities designed to
provide permanent protection from disasters. Not all disasters, particularly
natural disasters, can be prevented, but the risk of loss of life and injury
can be mitigated with good evacuation plans, environmental planning and design
standards
Disaster preparedness
These activities are designed to
minimize loss of life and damage – for example by removing people and property
from a threatened location and by facilitating timely and effective rescue,
relief and rehabilitation. Preparedness is the main way of reducing the impact
of disasters.
Disaster relief
This is a coordinated multi-agency
response to reduce the impact of a disaster and its long-term results. Relief
activities include rescue, relocation, providing food and water, preventing
disease and disability, repairing vital services such as telecommunications and
transport, providing temporary shelter and emergency health care.
Disaster recovery
Once emergency needs have been met
and the initial crisis is over, the people affected and the communities that
support them are still vulnerable. Recovery activities include rebuilding
infrastructure, health care and rehabilitation. These should blend with
development activities, such as building human resources for health and
developing policies and practices to avoid similar situations in future.
Disaster management is linked with
sustainable development, particularly in relation to vulnerable people such as
those with disabilities, elderly people, children and other marginalized groups.
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