Title: Follow Health, Safety
1Follow Health, Safety Security Procedures
2Welcome
- This module deals with the following
competencies - Follow work policy and procedures for health,
safety and security - Deal with emergency situations
- Deal with security situations
3Health and Safety
- Company occupational health, safety and security
procedures protect the safety of you, your
colleagues, your customers and anyone else who is
involved with your workplace.
4Employer responsibilities
- Employers are responsible for making sure that
the people who work for them, and their
customers, are not subject to unnecessary risks. - In the workplace it is the employer who has the
main responsibility for occupational health,
safety and security.
5Employee responsibilities
- Workers are required to assist their employers
with their Health and Safety responsibility. - Workers must follow the policies and procedures
in the workplace and report any breaches
immediately to the appropriate person. - It is also important that any suspicious behavior
is reported as soon as it is noticed to ensure
the security of workers and the workplace itself.
6Employee responsibilities (cont.)
- Working in a way that ensures personal safety,
and the safety of others including colleagues and
customers - Using safety equipment in accordance with the
manufacturers instructions - Using all safety equipment when and where
required and in a correct manner (such as
goggles, masks, gloves, guards)
7Employee responsibilities (cont.)
- Reporting accidents, injuries, or illness to the
appropriate person - Reporting any equipment in need of repair
8Safe systems of work
- Safe work practices will differ according to the
actual job you have within the Tourism industry.
9Office Safety
- There is no single correct posture or
arrangement of components that will fit everyone.
However, there are basic design goals.
10Office Safety (cont.)
Source http//ergo.human.cornell.edu/dea651/dea65
12k/ergo12tips.html
11Cabin crew safety
- Cabin crew provide health and safety information
and guidance to passengers and maintain their
compliance with these requirements throughout all
phases of the flight from pre-flight to
disembarkation.
12Cabin Crew Safety (cont.)
- Provide and/or demonstrate routine health and
safety information and guidance to passengers
during different phases of the flight and in
different situations, including pre-flight,
taking off, in-flight, during turbulence,
abnormal or emergency situations landing and
taxiing - Tell individual passengers what they should do in
an emergency as necessary
13Cabin Crew Safety (cont.)
- Make sure passengers luggage and belongings are
stowed correctly - Make sure passengers follow health and safety
notices and regulations - Ask passengers who are not following health and
safety regulations to do so in a polite way that
encourages them to co-operate
14Cabin Crew Safety (cont.)
- Make sure you know your companys policies and
procedures for dealing with passengers who do not
follow health and safety regulations, including
your rights and responsibilities in relation to
carrying (or not carrying) passengers who are
drunk, disruptive or likely to put the aircraft
and others onboard at risk.
15Cabin Crew Safety (cont.)
- Airlines have the right to refuse to carry
passengers with conditions that may worsen or
have serious consequences during the flight. - If cabin crew suspect before departure that a
passenger may be ill, the aircrafts captain will
be informed and a decision taken as to whether
the passenger is fit to travel, needs medical
attention, or presents a danger to other
passengers and crew or to the safety of the
aircraft.
16Airport Safety
- This section has been adapted from Personal
protective equipment (PPE) High Visibility
Clothing for Airport Workers, Health Safety
Executive, and accessed September 2007, available
at http//www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/apis1.htm
17Airport Safety (cont.)
- At airports there are many potential risks to
workers in particular, the risk of being struck
by moving aircraft or airside vehicles. - Control measures, such as the design of aircraft
stands, roadways and parking areas that
physically segregate people from moving aircraft
and their support vehicles reduce the risk of
accidents.
18Airport Safety (cont.)
- Certain groups of workers have to work very near
to aircraft and vehicles and additional
precautions are needed for their safety. - Workers whose work involves them spending time
in or around aircraft include aircraft
marshallers, loaders, baggage handlers, and
refuelling engineers.
19Airport Safety (cont.)
- Wear high visibility (HV) clothing
20Airport Safety (cont.)
- Falls from height are a significant risk at
airports.
21- While there are obvious risks in opening aircraft
doors from the outside, there are also risks in
opening the doors from the inside.
22Baggage Handling Safety
- This section has been adapted from
http//www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/baggagehandling/ti
cket_counter.html and http//www.hse.gov.uk/airtr
ansport/baggage.htm
23Baggage Handling Safety (cont.)
- Ticket agents generally encounter hazards while
working at a computer workstation and while
transferring baggage.
24Baggage Handling Safety (cont.)
- Perform stretching exercises that help loosen and
relax your muscles and joints.
25Transferring baggage
- Transferring baggage to the main conveyor can
place your body in an akward position - Take care when bending over to tag or lift
baggage - Be aware that twisting the torso while lifting
puts you at risk of injury - Make sure baggage straps do not dangle as they
may get caught in the belts or on corners.
26Transferring baggage (cont.)
- Perform stretching exercises that help loosen and
relax the muscles and joints. - Avoid repeatedly lifting baggage to a temporary
position on the floor and then lifting it again
to the main conveyor by tagging baggage while it
is in the bagwell. - Get help from another person or use a lifting aid
when handling heavy baggage
27Baggage handling
- Politely ask passengers to place baggage in the
bagwell so that you do not have to bend over the
counter to retrieve it - Tag heavy baggage to create awareness of actually
bag weight
28Cargo Officer safe work procedures
- Agents who work in the baggage make-up room spend
long hours on their feet. They must move baggage
from conveyors to carts and baggage containers
for transport to the plane. Conditions in the
make-up room can be particularly stressful during
peak times when baggage flow rates are at their
highest.
29Cargo Officer Safety (cont.)
- Safe work procedures can help reduce or eliminate
make-up room injuries when using the following
baggage sorting systems.
30Good lifting technique
- This section has been adapted fromGetting to
grips with manual handling A short guide, HSE,
Accessed September 2007, available at
www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg143.pdf
31Hazard management
- Hazard management is the identification of
hazards in the workplace that pose a potential
threat and the implementation of steps to
eliminate those hazards. Hazards include - Chemical
- Physical and
- Psychological hazards