The following is a transcript of the Risk Assessment infographic:
To improve safety in a facility, you need to understand and address the safety issues. A standardized way to get this understanding and create effective improvements is a Risk Assessment. The same general approach can be used for most types of safety issues, as with Electrical Risk Assessments or Chemical Risk Assessments.
Every Successful Risk Assessment Includes These Five Steps:
What Are We Thinking About?
Make a list of the safety issues you need to address. This may be a Chemical Inventory, Equipment Inventory, a Job/Task List, or all of those things.
EXAMPLES: Degreasers, Work Platform, Oven Exhaust, Feeding the Alligators
What's the Problem?
For each item on the list, identify the specific hazards involved. (A hazard is a potential source of injury or loss.)
EXAMPLES: Toxic Chemicals, High Ledge, Hot Surface, Hungry Alligators
How Bad is it?
For each hazard, consider the following: How likely is the hazard to actually cause harm?
a. How often are people exposed to the hazard?
b. When a person is exposed, how likely is that exposure to lead to a harmful event?
c. When a harmful event happens, how difficult is it for a person to avoid harm?
If a person is actually harmed by the hazard, how serious will that harm be? The combination of these ideas - that is, the combination of the likelihood and the severity of an injury that results from a hazard - is called Risk.
EXAMPLES
The degreaser is used for hours every day, and contact with the liquid or fumes can cause irritation (high likelihood). Brief exposures will only cause nausea (low severity). Overall, this is a medium risk.
Workers only need to access the raised platform for annual inspections, and guards are in place (low likelihood). However, a fall could be deadly (high severity). Overall, this is a medium risk.
The oven exhaust system is hard to reach, and work on it requires the oven to be locked out (low likelihood). The surfaces are only hot enough to cause first-degree burns (low severity). Overall, this is a very low risk.
Feeding alligators from the edge of the alligator pit is a very high-risk activity; it would be easy for the feeder to fall in (high likelihood), and they could be eaten by the alligators (high severity). Overall, this is a very high risk.
What Should be Done?
Once you've evaluated the risks involved with a hazard, assign protective steps, or Controls, to reduce those risks. A common approach is to use the Hierarchy of Controls, which tries the most effective types of controls first:
1. Elimination
Remove the hazard entirely.
2. Substitution
Replace a high-risk hazard with a low-risk hazard.
3. Engineering Controls
Physically change the equipment or work environment to separate workers from the hazard.
4. Awareness
Provide information to help workers understand the risks and act safely.
5. Administrative Controls
Create instructions or safe work procedures for expected conditions.
6. Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
Provide protective gear for workers to wear as a last line of defense
What Happened?
It's hard to make lasting improvements in the long run without writing things down. For your Risk Assessment, create documentation that shows these details:
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