Posts Tagged ‘Workplace Health and Safety’
The worker suffered a fractured vertebrae in his back, broken bones in his forearm and a broken thumb in the accident. The accident happened in August 2010 when the worker was employed by Ness Engineering Ltd of Shetland.
He was off work for more than 2 months as a result of the accident.
The project the employee and his colleagues were working on required the dismantling of an aerial mast at a former RAF base in Unst. The court heard that a risk assessment had been carried out by managing director Ronnie Leslie, which said that work should be done from inside the mast.
Unbolted pieces of metal and wood were to be loaded into a telehandler with a bucket attachment, so that they could be safely lowered to the ground. But when the four men on site, including Mr Leslie, encountered unforeseen difficulties in removing a four metre long metal section from within the structure, they deviated from the original work plan by using the telehandler to lift up to the area from the outside.
The Health and Safety (display screen equipment) Regulations apply to computer terminals (VDUs), stand alone PCs or networked systems. They were brought into force to protect people who regularly use screen equipment as a significant part of their normal work (for example more than an hour most days and occasionally two or three hours).
People who spend more than two hours each day sat at a desk may experience headaches, neck and lower back pain, sore arms and shoulders or a combination of these problems.
Assess and Reduce Risk
As an employer you must assess the health and safety risks to your employees because of the use of display screen workstations. A risk assessment involves identifying the hazards and assessing the level of risk. You must reduce the identified risk to the lowest extent reasonably practicable. The assessment should be reviewed regularly.
A new study from a leading website for personal injury lawyers has shed light on the state of workplace safety procedures within business around the UK; revealing that just under three quarters, 73%, of employees admit that they are ‘unaware’ of safety procedures within their workplace.
Furthermore, just under half, 49%, of employees taking part in the study claimed that they had never seen any written documentation of safety procedures in place; despite working in a business employing 5 or more people.
The study was conducted by www.personalinjurylawyers.co.uk, as part of research into health and safety precautions taken by UK businesses. 1,561 employees working in UK businesses employing 5 people or more subsequently took part, answering questions surrounding their knowledge of safety procedures in their working environment.
These regulations are designed to prevent death, injury and ill-health in the workplace including carrying out risk assessments and reporting major injuries.
You can find all 51 regulations that relate to general health and safety in the workplace here [opens in new window].
You can find all the regulations that relate to General health and safety in the workplace below to the left.
Tell us what you think should happen to these regulations and why, being specific where possible:
- Should we scrap them altogether?
- Could their purpose be achieved in a non-regulatory way (eg through a voluntary code?) How?
- Could they be reformed, simplified or merged? How?
- Can we reduce their bureaucracy through better implementation? How?
- Can we make their enforcement less burdensome? How?
- Should they be left as they are?
Source: Red Tape Challenge
For more information from www.ergojournal.co.uk about workplace ergonomics, workplace health and safety, ergonomic chairs, ergonomic products, DSE risk assessment, ergonomics software solutions, click here to become a subscriber. Alternatively, Subscribe to ErgoJournal by Email and follow us on Twitter @Ergo_Journal
- Ergonomic products supplier will offer Cardinus risk assessment and training
- Cardinus and Osmond are in tune with shared values and complementary products and services
CARDINUS Risk Management has formed an alliance with ergonomic products supplier Osmond Ergonomics that will bring benefits to customers of both companies.
Osmond will be introducing its customers to Cardinus e-learning, risk assessment, risk management and training services. The combination of complementary products and services provides a comprehensive solution to all ergonomics challenges.
Jon Abbott, managing director – ergonomics and safety at Cardinus Risk Management, said, “We are delighted to be working with Osmond Ergonomics. Our organisations share similar values in best practice and customer service, so working together we offer customers a compelling proposition.”
Osmond Ergonomics supplies office, industrial and laboratory seating, adjustable desks with electric (sit-stand) or manual height adjustment, storage and reception furniture along with a huge range of computer, desktop and lighting accessories.
- Cardinus Risk Management team will show conference and exhibition visitors how effective risk management can save money and improve productivity
- March 15-16 event at ExCel London will be ‘biggest and best conference to date’
VISITORS to this year’s IOSH conference and exhibition will see first hand how award-winning risk management products from Cardinus can reduce their health and safety costs, increase productivity and improve staff morale.
Cardinus Risk Management professionals will be on the Cardinus stand at DEF15, providing free consultations and advice to visitors. There will be demonstrations of Cardinus products and systems throughout the event, which takes place at ExCel London on March 15 and 16, 2011.
Workplace health and safety are important aspects of the business place that must be given proper attention to the details associated with how you protect your people and the premises. This can be accomplished with the very best health and safety solutions which meet in compliance with the most up-to-date legislation news and advice. As you know, since 2007, the Brady R.E.A.C.H. has been in place to protect human health and the workplace environment when it comes to the risks that may arise from the use of certain chemicals. There are two major conditions that R.E.A.C.H. is obligated to and these are the registration of substances on the EU market and communication of substances of very high concern (SVHCs) on the EU market.
In many instances, a business operates in a manner that involves chemicals and workplace health and safety are no joking matter. There are many different types of signs made from various materials to meet your needs. An environmentally friendly option means great for use indoors and outdoors, flame retardant and one of the easiest types of plastic to recycle. When you want to ensure that your message is clearly seen, there are floor signs with anti-slip protective laminate surfaces that provide slip resistant properties and easy adhesive backing.
Source: BusinessVnHealthTips
For more information from www.ergojournal.co.uk about workplace ergonomics, workplace health and safety, ergonomic chairs, ergonomic products, DSE risk assessment, ergonomics software solutions, click here to become a subscriber. Alternatively, Subscribe to ErgoJournal by Email and follow us on Twitter @Ergo_Journal
Using ergonomics to beat the downturn economy
If you asked a room full of British newspaper journalists, “what is the opposite of fun and adventure?” I bet most of them would say “health and safety”.
This can be quite depressing for the health and safety professional, whose main objective is to prevent workplace injuries and allow employees to continue to enjoy fun and adventure for many years to come.
I think it’s ironic that one of our leading driver trainers spends his weekends driving a racing car and that a Cardinus ergonomics consultant is a keen climber. We have seen cases where poor health and safety at work has led to people denied these pleasures for the rest of their lives. At Cardinus we believe health and safety supports fun and adventure.
Virgin Atlantic even makes the safety briefing sexy!
The unfortunate consequence of the stories written by that room full of journalists is that they undermine some of the impressive benefits a well-managed health and safety programme can bring. Companies with a positive attitude to health and safety tend to have a highly motivated workforce and they are more likely to be healthier. Health, motivation and positivity contribute enormously to fun and adventure.
Every good executive will tell you that they also contribute enormously to profit.
A comfortable employee will be much more productive that one who is in pain or fatigued. They will make fewer mistakes and take less sickness absence. Ergonomics can not only avoid costly injuries and court cases, but also can increase productivity and add real shareholder value. The same arguments can be made for good occupational road risk, manual handling, environmental programmes, too. In today’s financial climate safe, healthy, comfortable employees could be the difference between a positive balance sheet and a negative one.
The real opposite of ‘fun’ and ‘adventure’
Injury, discomfort and ill health are the true enemies of freedom and enjoyment, and we do see evidence of this kind of suffering in the workplace. It’s the goal of health and safety professionals like Cardinus to minimise or remove these risks.
There are, unfortunately, many risks associated with computer use, including work-related upper limb disorders (WRULDs) and musculoskeletal injuries.
WRULDs are soft tissue injuries that affect the muscles, tendons and nerves of the hands, arms, shoulders and neck. Musculoskeletal injuries are disorders of the bones, joints, ligaments, tendons, muscles and other soft tissues of the body. The disorders may develop over time as the result of cumulative repetitive stress or awkward movements that wear down the musculoskeletal system.
These conditions are not new. Throughout history a variety of conditions have been associated with occupations that require long bouts of repetitive movements. Some are well known: tennis elbow and writer’s cramp, for example. But what about housemaid’s knee, trigger finger and dog handler’s elbow? These conditions still affect today’s workplaces.
The same technology that helps us to work more efficiently, smarter and more quickly is to blame. When we used old-fashioned typewriters, we took regular micro-breaks to return the carriage every few seconds. This relieved the strain of repetition just enough, but the action has disappeared thanks to computers.
Telephones gave us the ability to communicate without walking to our colleagues in the next room or just across the floor; email has exacerbated this. Nowadays instant messaging means we don’t even have to speak to our colleagues on the next desk. The result is an increase in discomfort and a greater risk of ergonomic injuries.
The HSE is seeking views on a new online tool to help retailers assess the hazards in small low risk shops.
The tool, which is available for trial from now until March 2011, is part of the HSE’s response to Lord Young’s recent recommendation to reduce unnecessary paperwork and bureaucracy in low risk workplaces.
“Shop managers are best placed to identify what happens in their premises,” said HSE chair Judith Hackitt, “and we want to enable them to have confidence to say that they have dealt with the risks that do exist.”
The new 20-minute tool makes it clear there is no need for long detailed documents covering minor and improbable risks.
But it will not replace specific risk assessments in higher hazard activities such as the sale or storage of chemicals or fireworks, or in outlets where machinery is operating.
The tool prompts users through a series of basic questions and then generates a risk assessment and action plan.
When local authority officers inspect retail outlets, they will be instructed to consider the assessments as evidence that employers have acted appropriately.
In October, the HSE launched a similar 20-minute tool for offices. This consultation is still open for comments until 7 January 2011.
Another tool aimed at classrooms is out to consultation until 4 February 2011.
Source: HSW
For more information from www.ergojournal.co.uk about workplace ergonomics, workplace health and safety, ergonomic chairs, ergonomic products, DSE risk assessment, ergonomics software solutions, click here to become a subscriber. Alternatively, Subscribe to ErgoJournal by Email and follow us on Twitter @Ergo_Journal



