The following is a transcript of the Near-Miss Reporting Infographic:
Keep workers safe, develop a culture of safety, and better understand workplace hazards with near-miss reporting. But why is near-miss reporting so important?
OSHA defines a near miss as an unplanned event that did not result in injury, illness, or damage-but had the potential to do so. Only a fortunate break in the chain of events prevented an injury, fatality, or damage; in other words, a miss that was nonetheless very near.
Other terms include: Close Call, Near Accident, Accident Precursory, Injury-Free Event, Narrow Escape, Near Collision, and Near Hit.
Near misses don't exist in a vacuum. Conoco Phillips Marine conducted a study in 2003 that examined at-risk behaviors, near misses, injuries, and fatalities. The study found that, for ever fatality, there are at least 300,000 at-risk behaviors (such as skipping a safety step to save time).
300,000 at-risk behaviors (estimated)
3,000 near misses (estimated)
300 recordable injuries
30 lost workday cases
1 fatality
2,953,500 injuries and illnesses to private-sector workers in 2014.
4,821 worker deaths in 2014
8,092 injuries and illnesses to private-sector workers in 2014
13 worker deaths per day in 2014
Those in charge of the near-miss program should investigate all near misses to better understand their larger risks and hazards. This gives employees confidence that their concerns are given serious consideration.
WHO was involved? WHAT happened? WHEN did it happen? WHERE did it happen? WHY did it happen? HOW did it happen?
Near-miss reports should shed light on safety concerns, unsafe practices, potential OSHA violations, and more-and provide a path for resolving those issues.
All employees should receive training so they understand the system and the concept of a "near miss;" this overview should cover what to report, how to report, and why they should report.
Managers can better understand their facility's unique safety challenges, weak spots, areas of concern, and points of emphasis while developing a reporting system.
Frontline workers, middle management, safety specialists, and senior leadership should all work with each other to develop and maintain a successful near-miss reporting system.
Employees should be recognized (should they so choose) and rewarded for reporting near misses and calling attention to safety concerns. Safety managers should also make public any changes following near-miss reports so employees have evidence of the difference they're making.
Addresses potential accidents before they occur
Lowers workers' compensation costs
Develops new, more relevant training program
Promotes proactive approach to ensuring and improving safety
Improves teamwork among various departments and disciplines
Comply with OSHA requirements for reporting near-misses around confined spaces, industrial trucks, hazardous chemicals, and fall protection concerns on construction sites.
Keep workers safe
NEAR MISSES show where workers need more information.
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