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OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY

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Brief overview of general requirements of the OHS Act ... Victorian workplaces. Any place where employees work, including: self-employed. outworkers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY


1
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY
  • Occupational Health and Safety
  • in Offices

2
Session Aims
  • Brief overview of general requirements of the OHS
    Act
  • Overview of what we mean by hazards and risk
  • Get you thinking about what hazards might exist
    in offices
  • Think about how you can contribute to improving
    OHS at your workplace

3
What does the Act cover?
  • Victorian workplaces
  • Any place where employees work, including
  • self-employed
  • outworkers
  • contractors
  • employees of contractors
  • employees in State Government departments

4
What are the objects of the OHS Act 1985?
  • Secure the health, safety and welfare of persons
    at work
  • Protect persons at work against risks to health
    or safety
  • Help ensure a safe and healthy work environment
  • Eliminate, at the source, risks to the health,
    safety and welfare of persons at work
  • Involve employees, employers and their
    representatives

5
Employer duties (S. 21(1) (2) )
  • General duty of care
  • Provide and maintain, so far as is practicable, a
    working environment that is safe and without
    risks to health
  • Specific duties
  • Provide and maintain safe plant and systems of
    work
  • Arrange safe systems of work in connection with
    the use, handling, storage and transport of plant
    and substances
  • Provide a safe working environment
  • Provide adequate welfare facilities
  • Provide information, instruction, training and
    supervision to enable employees to work safely

6
(No Transcript)
7
Employer duties (S. 21(4))
  • Specific duties (contd)
  • Monitor the health of employees
  • Keep information and records
  • Engage or employ suitable people to provide
    advice on health and safety in the workplace
  • Nominate appropriately senior person/s to act as
    the employers representative
  • Monitor conditions at the workplace
  • Provide information to employees (in appropriate
    languages)

8
What is practicable?
  • Four tests of practicability - all are taken into
    account when determining whether a duty has been
    met
  • severity of hazard or risk
  • state of knowledge about the hazard or risk and
    any ways of removing or mitigating the hazard or
    risk
  • availability and suitability of ways to remove or
    mitigate the hazard or risk
  • cost of removing or mitigating the hazard or risk

9
Other duties (S. 22 23)
  • Employers and self-employed persons must ensure,
    so far as is practicable, that health and safety
    of all types of non-employees is not adversely
    affected by their business activities (S 22)
  • Occupiers of workplaces must take all practicable
    measures to ensure the workplace and means of
    entry and exit are safe and without risks to
    health (S 23)

10
Employee duties (S. 25)
  • Whilst at work, employees must
  • take reasonable care for their own health and
    safety and for the health and safety of anyone
    else who may be affected by their acts or
    omissions
  • cooperate with their employer on any actions
    taken to comply with the requirements of the OHS
    Act
  • Employees must not
  • wilfully or recklessly interfere with or misuse
    any safety equipment provided for their use
  • wilfully put at risk the health and safety of
    others in their workplace

11
Consultative structures
12
Consultation
  • The OHS Act emphasises consultation as the key to
    successful management of OHS
  • The Act encourages the establishment of
    structures to assist in the consultation process
  • initiate or establish one or more designated work
    groups
  • elect health and safety representatives (and
    nominate management representatives)
  • establish health safety committees

13
Hazard identification and risk assessment
14
What is a hazard?
  • Definition
  • anything with the potential to cause injury or
    illness
  • Examples
  • a workstation with little or no adjustment
    facility (or where these are not used properly)
  • storing boxes or other equipment on top of filing
    cabinets

15
What do we mean by risk?
  • Definition
  • an assessment of the likelihood of exposure to a
    hazard, and the possible consequences of the
    exposure
  • Examples
  • an incorrectly-adjusted workstation - causing
    back pain and eye strain
  • moving boxes stored on top of a filing cabinet -
    resulting in back injury

16
Controlling risk
  • The process of working out what needs to be done
    to eliminate or reduce risk, and putting those
    measures in place
  • Use the Hierarchy of Controls to work out the
    best way to control the risk
  • Elimination - controlling the hazard at source.
  • Substitution - eg. replacing one substance or
    activity with a less hazardous one.
  • Engineering - eg. installing guards on machinery
  • Administration - policies and procedures for safe
    work practices
  • Personal Protective Equipment - eg respirators,
    ear plugs.

17
3 steps in the process
  • Hazard identification
  • use checklists or other prompts
  • think about types of injury or illness possible
  • Risk assessment
  • think about how workers are being exposed to a
    hazard, how often this happens, how the work is
    done, and any controls already in place
  • Risk control
  • eliminate or reduce the identified risks
  • as far as practicable

18
Office OHS- What can you do about it? -
  • Report hazards to supervisor / manager / health
    safety representative
  • Dont be afraid to make suggestions
  • Make sure you (and others) use the available
    controls
  • Participate in training, drills and awareness
    programs
  • Look out for yourself and others

19
Whats Wrong Here?
20
Key hazards in offices
  • Lighting, ventilation, noise
  • Office / workstation layout
  • Job design
  • VDUs and photocopiers
  • Manual handling
  • Storage / housekeeping
  • Hazardous substances
  • Fire and emergency
  • First aid
  • Electricity

21
Summary
  • Key features of the OHS Act
  • Consultation in the workplace
  • The hazard identification, risk assessmentand
    risk control process
  • Some of the key OHS issues you might come across
    in an office environment
  • What you can do to get involved in OHS at work
  • Where to go for help

22
UNIT ASSESSMENT CHAPTER 2
  • OHS Officer and station
  • Role/Responsibility of OHS Rep
  • Role/Responsibility of Workers
  • 5 main OHS provisions in your company
  • 3 important web site addresses for OHS and
    Workcover
  • Actions/Consequences of safety breach
  • Ergonomic requirements of office furniture
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