Title: Field Technicians Ergonomics: Instructor Guide
1Field Technicians Ergonomics Instructor Guide
Department of Occupational Safety and
Health Executive Vice Presidents
Office Communications Workers of America, AFL-CIO
2Overview
- Purpose and overview of the course
- How to get the most of your presentation
- Job hazard analysis worksheets and examples
- Tool analysis worksheet and examples
3Purpose and overview of the course
- This course consists of two half-hour modules,
which may be presented separately or jointly in a
safety meeting format. - The first module teaches basic ergonomic tool
design and use for workers whose job requires
considerable use of hand tools. This includes
central office personnel, field technicians,
factory, and other craft workers. - A second module allows you to apply these basic
principles to specific tools and work tasks that
your members actually use or experience. - This notebook also includes job hazard analysis
and tool design and use checklists for the
instructor, as well as completed sample
checklists and job hazard analyses for
problem-solving in and outside the training
environment.
4More about this programand how to use it
- You can move forwards and backwards in this Power
Point program simply by pressing the ltPageUpgt or
ltPageDowngt keys on your keyboard or simply
clicking the mouse to move forward. You can look
at each slide as long as you want, and go back
and forth as often as you like. Youll see
tables, charts, words, and pictures on every
slide. They are actual tools and real workers
filmed in typical work places throughout the U.S.
When youre done with the program, press the
ltEscgt key and quit out of the Power Point
program. - This program is developed by the CWA Occupational
Safety and Health Department for use by the
Unions officers, staff, and members. We also
welcome the employers we represent to use it as a
training tool. - Were deeply indebted to the CWA members who
volunteered to participate in this program and
those too numerous to mention in the credits who
gave us their ideas and insights. This program
is dedicated to all the field technician CWA
members.
5Getting the most out of your presentation
- Dont try to wing it! There is a CD-ROM disk
and a set of overhead transparencies generated
from the disk that you can use in each training
module. Study these carefully in advance of the
training session, give a practice presentation to
co-workers or family members first, if necessary,
and try to develop ownership of the materials. - Get to the training site at least fifteen minutes
early to set up, hand out materials, and greet
your participants. It sets a very bad impression
when you show up late! - Make sure any audio-visual equipment youll be
using, as well as sample tools or props, are
readily available and operating correctly before
you begin your training.
6Getting the most out of your presentation
- Have your participants briefly introduce
themselves and then introduce yourself, state the
purpose of the meeting and ask the participants
if they can read the material from the projector
before you start. - Maintain eye contact when you speak.
- Request the group turn off all cell phones and
pagers before you start your presentation to
reduce distractions. - When a question is asked, restate the question
before you answer. This way, you can make sure
youre answering the question that is being
asked. Look directly at the person who asked the
question then repeat the question and answer it.
7Getting the most out of your presentation
- Before you begin, familiarize your participants
with emergency exits, rest rooms, etc. - You can essentially read off the overheads, as
you move through the presentation, but it vastly
improves the learning experience if you can give
examples that are appropriate to the group. It
is best if you can jot these examples down on the
materials before-hand. - Encourage participation from your group by asking
them for examples of the points on the CD-ROM,
slides, or overheads - If youre looking for a more generic worksite
analysis checklist and you have access to the
web, try the Washington state checklist at
http//www.lni.wa.gov/wisha/regs/ergo2000/ergowac.
htm29-62-5172.
8Ergonomic Job Hazard Analysis (EJHA) Worksheet
- The purpose of this worksheet is to involve
workers, supervisors, union, and employer safety
representatives in developing a better
understanding about the presence of ergonomic
risk factors and potential corrective actions in
specific job tasks. In the second module, well
demonstrate a EJHA for a cable splicing bench
tool. - You can also use job hazard analysis outside the
classroom environment to analyze any type of job
for the presence of ergonomic risk factors. - Always involve the worker in the analysis.
Interview them, have them talk you through the
job, review all drafts of the EJHA with them, and
make certain that they feel the EJHA accurately
represents what it is they do and the risks
theyre exposed to.
9Ergonomic Job Hazard Analysis Worksheet
- Developing an EJHA is an excellent educational
experience for workers who do this job, because
they are involved in learning about the ergonomic
hazards associated with each step of their job
task. It is also an excellent learning
opportunity for the supervisor and the company
safety representative. - The EJHA form (next page) consists of three
inter-related columns - Job element this is a specific job task, like
stripping wires, moving parts into position,
carrying a tool box, etc. - Ergonomic risk factor this is a particular risk
factor(s) associated with each job element, such
as posture, repetition, force, or contact
stressor. - Potential causes this is the potential cause of
the risk factor. For example, if the risk factor
identified is force, its important to identify
if the cause is associated with the tool (e.g.,
dull blade), the material being worked on (e.g.,
thickness of sheath being cut), or other factors
(e.g., gloves, poor hand/tool coupling, etc.). - Corrective action this is a practical way to
reduce or eliminate the risk factor identified in
the second column.
10 Job Hazard Analysis Worksheet
Ergonomic
11Hand tool design/selection checklist
- The hand tool design/selection checklist can be
used both in a learning environment and by the
instructor outside of the learning environment to
determine what ergonomic risk factors are present
in the design (not the actual use) of a specific
hand tool. - This design/selection checklist is developed from
several key ergonomic handbooks and incorporates
design criteria used by many employers and tool
manufacturers. - For each of the criteria listed in the checklist,
there are specific recommendations for that
criterion. - For each of the criteria, you should measure or
evaluate that particular feature of the tool and
enter this information into the checklist, then
compare that response with the recommended
specification.
12Hand Tool Design/Selection Checklist
13Hand tool use checklist
- The hand tool use checklist is used to evaluate
how the tool is actually used by a particular
worker. - It asks yes and no questions about muscle
loading, posture, vibration, and contact
stressors. If a Yes answer is checked, the
user would provide a detailed explanation. - The criteria in this checklist are also developed
from several well-known ergonomic handbooks. - This checklist can also be utilized inside and
outside a classroom setting. The attached
checklist follows together with an example of a
checklist for a splicing tool.
14Tool use checklist