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Safety

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... India suffered a major plant failure. ... Accident Prevention Programs There are many different types of accident prevention programs - simple to complex. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Safety


1
Safety Health Movement
  • Historical Perspective and Overview

2
Safety Movement
  • Has developed steadily since the early 1900s.
  • Industrial accidents were commonplace in this
    country.
  • In 1907 over 3,200 people were killed in mining
    accidents.

3
Safety Movement
  • Legislation, precedent, and public opinion all
    favored management.
  • Few protections for workers safety.
  • Today working conditions have improved.
  • The current death rate from work-related injuries
    is less than a third of the rate 50 years ago.

4
Before the Industrial Revolution
  • Safety health laws begins in the days of the
    ancient Babylonians, circa 2000 BC.
  • The code of Hammurabi.
  • Contained clauses dealing with injuries,
    allowable fees for physicians, and monetary
    damages assessed against those who injured
    others.

5
Before the Industrial Revolution
  • The movement continued with the Egyptian
    civilization.
  • Rameses II (circa 1500 BC), undertook a major
    construction project.
  • To be successful, Rameses created an industrial
    medical service to care for workers.

6
Before the Industrial Revolution
  • They were required to bathe daily in the Nile,
    and were given regular medical examinations.
  • Sick workers were isolated.

7
Before the Industrial Revolution
  • The Romans were also concerned with safety
    health.
  • They built aqueducts, sewerage systems, public
    bathes, latrines, and well-ventilated houses.

8
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1867 Massachusetts introduces factory
    inspections.
  • 1868 patent is awarded for the first barrier
    safeguard.
  • 1869 Pennsylvania passes law requiring two exists
    from all mines, and the Bureau of labor
    Statistics is formed.

9
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1877 Massachusetts passes a law requiring
    safeguards on hazardous machines, and the
    Employers liability law is passed.
  • 1892 First recorded safety program is
    established.
  • 1900 Fredrick Taylor conducts first systematic
    studies of efficiency in manufacturing.

10
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1907 Bureau of Mines is created by U.S.
    Department of the Interior.
  • 1908 Concept of workers compensation is
    introduced in the United States.
  • 1911 Wisconsin passes the first effective
    workers compensation law in the United States.

11
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1911 New Jersey becomes the first state to uphold
    a workers compensation law.
  • 1912 First Cooperative Safety Congress meets in
    Milwaukee.
  • 1913 National Council of Industrial Safety is
    formed.
  • 1915 NCIS changes its name to National Safety
    Council.

12
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1916 Concept of negligent manufacture is
    established (product liability).
  • 1936 National Silicosis Conference convened by
    the U.S. secretary of Labor.
  • 1970 Occupational Safety and Health Act passes.
  • 1977 Federal Mine Safety Act passes.

13
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 1986 Superfund Amendments Reauthorization Act
    passes.
  • 1990 Amended Clean Air Act of 1970 passes.
  • 1996 Total safety management (TSM) concept is
    introduced.

14
Milestones in the Safety Movement
  • 2000 U.S. firms begin to pursue ISO 14000
    registration for environmental safety management.
  • 2003 Workplace terrorism is an ongoing concern of
    safety health professionals.
  • 2007 Safety of older people reentering the
    workplace becomes an issue.

15
Tragedies and Change
  • Safety and health tragedies in the workplace have
    greatly accelerated the pace of the safety
    movement in the U.S.
  • Three of the most significant were the Hawks
    nest, asbestos, and Bhopal tragedies.

16
Hawks Nest Tragedy
  • The Great Depression was indirectly responsible
    for the attention given to an occupational
    disease that came to be known as silicosis.
  • This was a disease that caused lung damage from
    breathing silica.
  • Showed up on pre-employment physicals resulting
    from people changing jobs.

17
Hawks Nest Tragedy
  • A company was given a contract to drill a
    passageway through a mountain in West Virginia.
  • Workers spent as many as 10 hours a day breathing
    the dust created by the drilling and blasting.
  • This mountain had an unusually high silica
    content.

18
Hawks Nest Tragedy
  • Silicosis is a disease that normally takes 10 to
    30 years to show up in exposed workers.
  • At Hawks Nest, workers were dying in as little
    time as a year.
  • By the time the project was completed, hundreds
    had died.

19
Asbestos Menace
  • Once considered a miracle fiber.
  • In 1964, at a conference it was revealed that
    this material was killing workers.
  • Was first linked to lung cancer and respiratory
    diseases.
  • Was one of the most widely used materials in the
    U.S.

20
Asbestos Menace
  • Found in homes, schools, offices, factories,
    ships and even in the filters of cigarettes.
  • In the 1970s and 1980s, asbestos became a
    controlled material.

21
Bhopal Tragedy
  • 1984 Union Carbide Chemical plant in Bhopal,
    India suffered a major plant failure.
  • Over 40 tons of methyl isocyanate leaked out and
    killed more than 3,000 people.
  • As many as 50,000 additional people were exposed
    to the poisonous gas

22
Bhopal Tragedy
  • The company was accused of criminal negligence,
    corporate prejudice, and avoidance.
  • Provided incentive for the passage of stricter
    safety legislation worldwide.
  • In the U.S. led to the passage of the Emergency
    Planning Community Right-to-Know Act
    (EPCRA)-1986

23
Role of Organized Labor
  • Worked to overturn anti-labor laws relating to
    the safety in the workplace.
  • The fellow servant rule - held that employers
    were not liable for workplace injures that
    resulted from the negligence of other employees.

24
Role of Organized Labor
  • Contributory negligence - if the actions of
    employees contributed to their own injures, the
    employer was absolved of any liability.
  • Assumption of risk - theory that people who
    accept a job assume the risks that go with it.

25
Accident Prevention Programs
  • There are many different types of accident
    prevention programs - simple to complex.
  • Widely used accident prevention techniques
    include failure minimization, fail-safe designs,
    isolation, lockouts, screening, personal
    protective equipment, redundancy, and timed
    replacements.

26
Accident Prevention Programs
  • In the 1800s employers had little concern for
    the safety of workers.
  • Between WW I and WW II, industry discovered the
    connection between quality and safety.
  • During WW II there were severe labor shortages.

27
Accident Prevention Programs
  • Employers could not afford to lose workers to
    accidents.
  • This realization created a greater openness
    towards increasing worker safety.
  • Improved engineering could prevent accidents.
  • Employees were willing to learn and accept safety
    rules.

28
Accident Prevention Programs
  • Safety rules could be established and enforced.
  • Financial savings from safety improvement could
    be reaped by savings in compensation and medical
    bills,
  • Early safety programs were based on the three Es
    of safety - engineering, education, and
    enforcement.
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