To improve safety, increase focus on the basics
According to several workers’ compensation insurance carriers, serious injuries increased during 2020 and involved many of the same hazards that appear every year in OSHA’s Top Ten violations list, such as lockout/tagout and machine guarding. This suggests a need for employers to review and provide training on some of the basics.
It’s been said that expertise is simply a mastery of the basics. That concept applies on the job, where an emphasis on the basics is essential to preventing injuries. Focusing on the basics is important for new hires, but also for employees returning to work following a shutdown, or even for experienced employees who’ve become lax about following procedures.
Five rules for safety
Nearly every aspect of safety falls under one of these rules:
- Employees are responsible for following safety rules.
- Never take shortcuts or work in unsafe conditions.
- If you don’t know the procedure, ask for help.
- Report all hazards, injuries, near misses, and other concerns.
- Everyone is responsible for preventing injuries.
If everyone follows these rules, employees will always wear appropriate PPE, report any hazards, and make safety a priority. The goal is to help employees understand that their actions and choices impact their risk of injury.
Conditions and behaviors
Nearly every injury results from an unsafe condition, an unsafe employee behavior, or a combination of both. Even if a worker ignored a safety rule, however, employers should not blame the employee. There’s often something more the employer could have done, like enforcing rules more diligently or providing additional training.
In many ways, employers are responsible for both conditions and behaviors. Employers have the authority to correct unsafe conditions. They also have the ability to incentivize and reinforce safe behaviors, and impose discipline for unsafe behaviors.
Employees can make a significant contribution to safety by reporting unsafe conditions and choosing to follow procedures. When employees consistently follow the rules, they demonstrate a mastery of the basics that contributes to the overall safety record.