Survey finds reasons employees don’t wear PPE
A survey of safety professionals found that the most common excuse given by employees for not wearing required personal protective equipment (PPE) was that they simply didn’t feel like wearing it.
The survey, conducted by J. J. Keller & Associates, Inc., also identified challenges with sizing, supply chain issues, and getting employees to wear PPE during hot days. Overall, the most common challenge was getting employees to wear PPE in the first place.
Respondents were asked to select the reasons for employee failure to wear PPE, and could choose multiple responses, so the results total more than 100%. Top reasons included:
- Just didn’t want to wear it: 72%
- Didn’t think it was necessary: 50%
- Made the job more difficult: 50%
Encourage the right choice
The top two responses suggest that employees choose not to wear PPE. Getting them to think about their reasons for that choice and the potential consequences could help encourage the correct choice.
If employees refuse to wear PPE, they’re essentially choosing to accept the risk of not wearing it. However, employees don’t have the authority to make that choice. The employer requires PPE not only because it prevents injuries, but because federal regulations require the employer to provide PPE and enforce its use.
At home, individuals may choose to accept the risks of certain behaviors. At work, many employees might think they’re smart enough to avoid injury, or think the odds are low enough that the risk is worth the benefits of not wearing PPE.
To encourage the right choice, employers might try one or more of the following approaches:
Impacts on others: Point out that an injury has consequences for the employee, the employee’s family, the company, and even the employee’s coworkers. By choosing to accept the risk of personal injury, they’re imposing the consequences of that choice on others. This is one reason employees don’t have the authority to make that choice. Remind them that every worker who suffered a life-changing injury had also chosen to accept the risk.
Risk and reward: Acknowledge that the injury risk may be low, and that working carefully further reduces risk. Then, describe the potential injuries that could occur (like loss of an eye) and ask them to consider the impacts of those life-changing injuries. Finally, ask if the risk is worth whatever benefit they get from not wearing PPE. They may realize that they’re taking a big risk for a minimal reward.
What’s the benefit: Ask what benefit they get by not wearing PPE. Reasons might include comfort, fit, heat, loss of dexterity, or limited vision. Employers can usually offer something to mitigate or reduce those problems. Employees might not be able to offer a good reason for refusing to wear it, but one possible reason could be a desire for control. They might have thought, “I’m a responsible adult and can work without injury, so I don’t need to wear PPE.” This perceived benefit essentially results in taking control by accepting the risk of injury.
In short, ask employees to think about the consequences of likely injuries, not only to themselves and their quality of life, but to their families.
Key to remember: Remind employees that they don’t have the authority to choose to accept the risk of injury, and the employer legally cannot allow them to take that risk.