Title: Examples of success practical experience of preventive activities
1Examples of success practical experience of
preventive activities
- Jukka Takala and Tim Tregenza
- European Agency for Safety and Health at Work
2Case studies
- Case studies are descriptions of real life
situations where a change has been made resulting
in an elimination or reduction of risks to
workers - Case studies are a useful tool for raising
awareness of risks and potential solutions - While case studies cannot be directly copied from
one workplace to another, they can transmit
approaches, ideas, and techniques that can be
applied within a safety and health management
system including risk assessment
3The good practice award scheme
- As part of each European campaign, EU-OSHA runs
the good practice awards (GPA) competition - The GPAs are an effective method to promote and
encourage practical workplace solutions - The GPAs invite businesses and organisations to
submit case studies of innovative solutions to
real workplace health and safety challenges - The scheme has been running since 2000
4Good practice awards competitions
- 2000 Turn your Back on MSDs
- 2001 Success is no Accident
- 2002 Working on Stress
- 2003 Dangerous Substances
- 2004 Building in Safety
- 2005 Stop that Noise!
- 2006 Safe Start
- 2007 Lighten the Load
- 2008-09 Risk assessment
5Requirements for submitted entries
- Improve the working conditions
- Promote health, safety, and efficiency
- Focus on eliminating or preventing risks at
source - Achievable, identifiable and permanent benefit
- At least meet the relevant legislative standards,
and preferably go beyond these minimum
requirements - Have a participatory approach between workers and
employers - Have the support of senior management
- Be clearly identifiable as the action that causes
the elimination or reduction of risk
6Good practice not just for enterprises
- The sharing of approaches and examples is not
just for enterprises - EU-OSHA also publishes examples of successful
interventions by - Sector organisations
- Regional bodies
- Employer and worker groups
- The same success factors apply at whatever level
of intervention a methodical, collaborative,
multidisciplinary approach engaging all relevant
stakeholders
7The GPA procedure
- Member States hold their own national
competition, the winners of which are submitted
to EU-OSHA - A tripartite jury of European experts select the
winning and highly commended entries - The European winners are recognised at a European
event - The successful entries are then published and
made available online to add to the database of
case studies - The following are examples of successful entries
8Moving concrete structures in the Netherlands
(2007)
- A building company had problems handling concrete
floor structures - Small product redesign led to an elimination of a
manual handling risk - EURO 96 000 annual saving after EURO 137 000
outlay
9E-Learning for Czech medical school students
(2006)
- A teaching hospital needed to provide OSH
training for medical students - An online training programme was implemented that
was accessible and more interesting than the
traditional lecture format - Training was found to be more systematic,
available, easier to update, and remained an
information source even after the student had
graduated
10Campaigning in Spanish Primary schools (2006)
- The European Centres for Businesses and
Innovation of Castilla and León run a school risk
awareness and prevention campaign - The campaign covers 120 000 students and uses a
broad range of tools, games, and promotional
materials - For a cost of less than EUR 4 per student,
students gain knowledge of existing risks and
future workplace hazards
11Tools for noise prevention in Denmark (2005)
- The Sector Work Environment Council for
Agriculture identified noise as a significant
risk on Danish farms - Following an investigation into the noise
sources, tools were produced the help farmers
reduce exposures to noise - Tools included a website that allows farmers to
assess their noise exposure without measurement,
prevention guidance, and practical examples
12Sound design in a Swedish music club (2005)
- Workers in a music club were being exposed to
high noise levels - The club layout was redesigned, changes made to
the work organisation, and awareness raising
carried out on the noise risks - Worker exposures were much reduced, and the
quality of sound was improved for performers and
audience
13Reducing risks during demolition in Poland (2004)
- Workers demolishing industrial premises were
being exposed to dust, noise, and hazardous
substances - A hydraulic device was designed by a management
and worker team - Using the tool removed workers from the most
hazardous areas and greatly reduced their
exposure to hazardous substances, dust, noise and
vibration
14Low-temperature asphalt in Germany (2003)
- Asphalt is usually laid at high temperatures with
hazardous fumes being given off in the process - A low-temperature asphalt was developed by an
industry group - The new asphalt is laid at lower temperatures,
reducing workers exposure, environmental
emissions, and saving energy
15Reducing stress in a Spanish old peoples home
(2002)
- Staff working in the old peoples home were
suffering high mental and physical strain - Analysis of the situation through surveys and
risk assessment was followed by a range of
improvements in work organisation and activities - Absenteeism dropped from 18 to 2, industrial
relations have improved, and staff have better
working conditions
16Cooperative problem solving in the UK (2001)
- In a car factory, a risk of workers being injured
by lift trucks was identified - A team of the effective workers supported by
management developed an effective solution - Not only has the risk greatly been reduced but
the workers have ownership of the preventive
measure
17Ergonomics for Finnish SMEs (2000)
- MSDs are a significant problem in SMEs, but they
frequently do not have the knowledge on how to
prevent them - A regional occupational health body in Finland
ran a programme with 24 SMEs analysing the
workplace, finding solutions, and sharing
knowledge - In the SMEs, preventive measures were
implemented, long term planning for prevention
initiated, and worker involvement developed
18Key success factors for case studies
- Analysis of case studies have found the following
success factors - A methodical approach, based on a structured risk
assessment, to identify the challenges and
implement the solutions - participatory approach - the involvement of the
workers and their representatives throughout the
process - multidisciplinary approach - collaboration of
people with expertise in different areas (e.g.
ergonomics, engineering, psychology, etc.) - sponsorship from the management so that
appropriate resources are made available to
improve the working environment
19- Thank you for your attention
- All case studies are available online at
http//osha.europa.eu/