Module 1 Part A
Module 1 Part A
2. Management Need:
• Management bear huge loss due to accident. Cost of accident is two
Types Direct & Indirect cost.
• Direct cost include medical expenses, compensation to the injured
or their families
3. Legal Need:
• As per The Building & other construction Act 1996, Factories Act
1948 and several other related Acts & rules the general duty of the
employer is to ensure Health & Safety of his employee & protect
the Environment.
4. Humanitarian Need:
The Humanitarian reason for prevention of accidents is based on
notion that it is duty of every person to ensure safety of his fellow
men.
Benefits to Organization:
To achieve lower
To prevent accidents in the To eliminate accident workmen’s compensation,
plant by reducing the caused work stoppage and insurance rates and
hazard to minimum. lost production. reduce all other direct and
indirect costs of accidents.
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OBJECTIVES OF INDUSTRIAL SAFETY ENGIEERING
To achieve lower
To prevent accidents in the To eliminate accident workmen’s compensation,
plant by reducing the caused work stoppage and insurance rates and
hazard to minimum. lost production. reduce all other direct and
indirect costs of accidents.
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SAFETY AND PRODUCTIVITY
• Companies may feel they have to choose between fast, cheap, or high-quality
• When companies are forced to reduce costs (cheap) and produce quickly
(fast) they need to sacrifice quality
• But sacrificing quality actually ends up driving up time and costs; unsatisfied
customers demand reworks, which can often be upwards of three times the
original budget
Traditional Barriers to Safety, Quality, and
Productivity (Cont.…)
• Productivity must never be seen to be at odds with safety or quality
Source, Situation, or Act with a potential for harm in terms of human injury
or ill health or property damage or a combination of these all.
• Reportable injury: If a person sustained injury & unable to resume his duty
within 48 hours.
Definitions
• Risk: Combination of Probability & severity of specific hazardous event
occurring.ie, Probability of event X Severity of harm
• An employer or contractor shall give notice to the Occupational Health and Safety
Branch of every accident at a place of employment that: causes, or may cause the death
of a worker; or will require a worker to be admitted to a hospital for 72 hours or more.
The notice must include:
❖ the name of each injured or deceased worker;
❖ the name of the employer of each injured worker or deceased worker;
❖ the date, time and location of the accident;
❖ the circumstances related to the accident;
❖ the apparent injuries; and
❖ the name, telephone and fax number of the employer or contractor, or person
designated by the employer or contractor to be contacted for additional information.
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DANGEROUS OCCURANCE
• These are incidents with a high
potential to cause death or serious
injury, but which happen relatively
infrequently.
• Dangerous occurrence means any
occurrence that does not result in, but
could (if the situation was different)
cause the death of a worker or will
require a worker to be admitted to a
hospital as an in-patient for a period of
72 hours or more.
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• Accidents due to dangerous occurences: It is
any occurrence at a place of employment that did
not result in, but could have resulted in the death
of a worker or required a worker to be admitted
to a hospital as inpatient for 72 hours or more.
• It includes bursting of vessel for containing
steam under pressure greater than atmospheric
pressure
• failure of crank or other appliances
• explosion of fire causing damage to any
room/place where person are employed,
• explosion of container used for storage of any
gas or liquid at a pressure greater than
atmospheric pressure.
• Bursting of grinding wheel
• The structural failure or collapse of a structure
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DANGEROUS OCCURANCE INCLUDES:
Electrical
incidents
Lifting Pressure Overhead
causing
equipment systems electric lines
explosion or
fire
Explosions, Radiation
Breathing Diving
biological generators and
apparatus operations
agents radiography
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CAUSES OF
ACCIDENTS
• Accidents can be caused by human (behavioral)
factors, such as:
• o Unsafe conduct
• o Inattention
• o Negligence
• o Improper training
• o Inexperience
• o Drowsiness, fatigue, or illness
• • As well as by environmental and workplace design
factors, such as:
• o Unsafe working conditions
• o Unsafe workplace design
• o Substandard safety controls
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Unsafe Act
An activity or a task that is conducted in a manner which increases
the probability of accidents
Working without wearing safety helmet & safety Shoes
Working at height without wearing full body harness.
Taking Rest in working Areas
working or Taking rest below Hanging Load
Over speeding
Operating equipment without qualification or authorization.
Lack of/or improper use of PPE
Operating equipment at unsafe speeds
Failure to warn
Bypass or removal of safety devices
Using defective equipment
Unsafe condition
• Any sources or situation or condition that have potential to
create accident is known as unsafe condition. Following are
example of unsafe Condition:
Mechanical guard not Provided on rotating parts
Defective sling or lifting equipment.
Defective work platform
Floor or platform Opening, Pits
Poor housekeeping
Defective tools, equipment or supplies
Inadequate supports or guards
Congestion in the workplace
Inadequate warning systems
Hazardous atmospheric conditions etc
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• The structural failure or collapse of a structure,
scaffold, temporary falsework or any part of a
tunnel, trench or excavation;
• The failure of a crane or hoist or the
overturning of a crane or unit of powered
mobile equipment
• An accidental contact with an energized
electrical conductor
• The bursting of a grinding wheel
• An uncontrolled spill or escape of a toxic,
corrosive or explosive substance;
• A premature detonation or accidental
detonation of explosives;
• The failure of an elevated or suspended
platform
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Method To Calculation Accident Rate, Frequency Rate &
Severity Rate (as per IS3786)
Method To Calculation Accident Rate, Frequency
Rate & Severity Rate (as per IS3786)
PREVENTION:
MEASURES TO
PREVENT
ACCIDENT THEORY ACCIDENTS
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RISK ASSESSMENT
: Systematic
evaluation of
hazards and risks
EMPHASIS:
CONTROL
MEASURES:
Engineering,
administrative, PPE
SURVEILLANCE:
Monitoring the
ongoing safety
performance
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1.
2.
3
4.
The key components are pre-dispositional characteristics and
situational characteristics.
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HOST : workers, more or less susceptible
to injury due to individual factors
(training, experience, health)
ARJUN P K
As the model shows, even as a person interacts with a machine within an environment,
three activities take place between the system and the task to be performed.
Every time a task must be performed, there is the risk that an accident may occur.
Sometimes the risks are great; at other times, they are small.
Based on the information that has been collected by observing and mentally noting the
current circumstances, the person weighs the risks and decides whether to perform the
task under existing circumstances.
• five factors should be considered before
beginning the process of collecting
information, weighing risks, and making a
decision:
• Job requirements
• The workers’ abilities and limitations
• The gain if the task is successfully
accomplished
ARJUN P K
• The loss if the task is attempted but
fails
• The loss if the task is not attempted
6. ENERGY RELEASE THEORY/ ENERGY TRANSFER
THEORY
• This theory compares the rate of release of
energy and relates to the kind of and
severity of injuries.
• The first step is to prevent the
accumulation of energy by reducing the
amount needed and/or providing vent
ARJUN P K
release mechanisms.
• The next step would be to install control
methods that modify the release rate
which can be accomplished with the use of
space (distance) and time.
ACCIDENTS OCCUR WHEN ENERGY IS RELEASED
OR TRANSFERRED IN AN UNCONTROLLED OR
UNINTENDED MANNER , RESULTING IN HARM
TO PEOPLE, EQUIPMENT, ENVIRONMENT
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• ENERGY SOURCE : Potential energy stored in various forms(
chemical, mechanical, thermal, electrical )
KEY • ENERGY TRANSFER: Movement of energy from one location to
COMPONENTS another.
• UNCOTROLLED ENERGY RELEASE: Sudden unintended or
uncontained release of energy
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• HAZARDOUS INTERACTION: contact between the released energy
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and a person, object or environment.
TYPES OF ENERGY RELEASE
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• For example, a fixed barrier
guard separates space by not
allowing workers or machinery
to reach a point of operation.
• This is a separation by space.
• Other control techniques
ARJUN P K
include strengthen the object
that may release the energy to
prevent such release.
• For example, slings used in
hoisting operations are strength
tested to withstand 2 times
there working load.
Willam Haddon a medical doctor
and the adminstrator of NHTSA at 1. Seat belts
one point in time, in 1966 helped to for all
impose the following regulations occupants
for new cars:
3. Penetration-
2. Energy-absorbing resistant
steering column windshield
6. All
measures
4. Dual 5. Padded correspond
braking instrument with the
systems panel energy and
barrier
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concept
7. BEHAVIOUR THEORY
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KEY COMPONENTS
HUMAN BEHAVOUR:
actions, decisions, and MOTIVATIONS: attitude,
choices made by values and beliefs
workers
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According to Geller, there
are seven basic principles of
BBS:
• The behavior intersession should be visible and
transparent.
• Determine external factors that can help understand and
improve behaviors.
• Activators should be used to direct behaviors while
consequences should be used to motivate behavior.
• Highlight positive consequences to reinforce favorable
behaviors.
• Make sure that the BBS program is measurable and
objective.
• Don’t limit possibilities, create hypotheses and combine
information gathered from the BBS program.
• Create a BBS program that considers employees’ feelings
and attitudes.
• Behavior-based safety trainers and
consultants teach the ABC model as a
framework to understand and analyze
behavior or to develop interventions for
improving behavior.
• As given in BBS principle, the “A” stands
for activators or antecedent events that
precede behavior.
• “B” and “C” refers to the consequences
following behavior or produced by it.
• Activators direct behavior, whereas
consequences motivate behavior.