Title: Employee Safety and Health
1Employee SafetyandHealth
2Occupational Safety and Health Act
- Occupational Safety and Health Act (1970)
- Federal law to ensure Safe and Healthful Working
Conditions. - Applies to all businesses with one or more
employees (except self-employed persons). - General-Duty Clause
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3OSHA Responsibilities
- What are OSHAs
- key responsibilities?
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4OSHA Standards
- Legally enforceable standards related to
employee health and safety. - OSHA issues standards for workplace hazards
- Where can standards be found?
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5Establishing OSHA Standards
- OSHA can initiate standards on its own or on
petitions from other parties. - National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH), an agency under HHS - Conducts research on safety and health
- Recommends most OSHA-adopted standards
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6Workplace Inspections
- OSHA compliance (inspectors)
authorized to conduct workplace inspections
without advance notice. - Marshall v. Barlows Inc. Employers have the
right to require that OSHA obtain a search
warrant before being admitted ---- although few
employers do so.
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7Inspection Priorities
- Imminent danger
- Catastrophes fatal accidents
(death or hospitalization of 3 or more) - Employee complaints
- Referrals
- Planned, or programmed
- Follow-ups
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8OSHA Inspection Procedures
- Inspectors OSHA credentials
- Preliminary meeting with top management
- Employer representative
- Employee representative
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9Citations
- In some cases, issued at the work site
immediately following closing conference. - Normally citations are issued by the OSHA area
director and sent by certified mail. - Employer must post a copy of citation at (or
near) violation site - For 3 days, or until violation is corrected
whichever period is longer.
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10OSHA Reporting Requirements
- Employer must report to OSHA within 8 hours of
learning about - Work-related employee death.
- In-patient hospitalization of 3 (or more)
employees from work-related incident. - Employer must report all fatal heart attacks.
- Deaths/Accidents not needing to be reported?
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11OSHA Record-Keeping Requirements
- Employers of 11 or more must
- Maintain records of occupational injuries
and illnesses - Post (February 1 - April 30) annual summary of
occupational injuries and illnesses.
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12OSHA Record-Keeping Requirements
- Record any fatality --- regardless of time
between injury and death. - Provide injury and illness records for inspection
and copying by - Representative of Secretaries of Labor or HHS, or
- State
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13OSHA Record-Keeping Requirements
- 3 Record-Keeping Forms are required
- OSHA Form 300 Log
- OSHA Form 300A Summary
- OSHA Form 301 Report
- These forms must be retained for 5 years by the
organization and available for inspection.
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14OSHA Form 300
- Employer must log each occupational injury and
illness within 6 working days from time employer
learns of it.
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15OSHA Forms 300A and 301
- Form 300A Employer must post copies of previous
years records no later than
February 1, and keep them through April 30. - Form 301 More data on how injury/illness
occurred - Completed within 7 calendar days from time
employer learns of work-related injury/illness.
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16Causes of Accidents Personal Acts
- As much as 80 of organization accidents are
caused by Unsafe Personal acts. - Potential Reasons?
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17How to Measure Safety
- Frequency How often disabling injuries occur
- Disabling injuries Cause employee to miss one or
more days of work following an accident
Lost-Time injuries. - Severity rate length of time injured employees
were out of work. - Only disabling injuries are used to determine
frequency and severity rates.
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18Organizational Safety Programs
- 4 Elements in most successful safety programs
- Genuine Support of top and middle managers.
- Safety is a clearly established responsibility of
operating managers. - Positive attitude toward safety exists.
- One person (or department) is in charge of safety
program and responsible for its operation.
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19Establishing a Safety Training Program
- Assess Training Needs
- Where problems are located
- What potential causes might be
- What was done in the past to correct them
- Gauge level of employees safety skills
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20Employee Health
- Occupational Diseases may cost industry as much
-- or more -- than occupational accidents. - Many diseases and health-related problems not
necessarily job related but affect job
performance.
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21Occupational Health Hazards
- Department of Labor uses four major categories to
classify occupational illnesses - Occupational skin diseases or disorders
- Respiratory conditions due to toxic agents
- Poisoning (systemic effects of toxic materials)
- All other occupational illnesses
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22Occupational Health Hazards
- Toxic Substance Control Act (1976) Requires
pre-testing of certain new chemicals. - OSHA requires organizations to
- Measure for safety.
- Record employee exposure to certain potentially
harmful substances. - Medical records must be made available to
- Employees, their Representatives, and OSHA.
- Records must be maintained for 30 years, even if
employee leaves the job.
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23Hazard Communications
- Right-to-Know Rule - to ensure employers and
employees know - What chemical hazards exist in the workplace
- How to protect themselves against hazards
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24Stress in the Workplace
- What is Stress?
- When is there Potential for Stress?
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25Stress in the Workplace
- How does Stress manifest itself in the workplace?
- Excessive stress can result in both physical and
emotional problems. - What are some stress-related disorders?
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26National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH)
- 40 of employees reported their job was very or
extremely stressful. - 25 view their jobs as 1 stressor in their
lives. - 75 of employees believe that employees have more
on-the-job stress than a generation ago. - 29 of employees felt quite or extremely stressed
at work. - 26 of employees said they were often or very
often burned out or stressed by their work
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27Stress in the Workplace
- Cost of Stress for employers is estimated at
over 300 Billion annually due to - Accidents
- Absenteeism and Employee Turnover
- Diminished Productivity
- Direct medical and insurance Costs
- Workers Compensation
- Other Legal costs
- 60 to 80 of Accidents on job are stress related
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28Burnout
- When work is no longer meaningful to a person.
Can result from stress or other work-related or
personal factors. - To reduce burnout Identify jobs with highest
potential for burnout. - Actions to reduce burnout potential?
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29Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
- Estimates that alcohol and drug abuse costs U.S.
economy 276 billion per year in - Lost productivity
- Health care expenditures
- Crime
- Motor vehicle crashes
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30Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
- Substance Abuse results in
- Reduced productivity
- Reduced work quality
- Damage to property and equipment
- Theft
- Lower morale
- Safety violations
- Poor decision making
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31Alcoholism
- Approximately 80 of all adult binge and heavy
drinkers are employed. - Economic loss to employer of alcoholic estimated
at 25 of employees wages - Alcoholics incur twice the rate of absenteeism
for illness. - Alcoholics are 2 to 3 times more likely to be
involved in work-related accidents. - Estimated 50 of problem employees in industry
are alcoholics.
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32Other Drugs
- Other drug usage falls into 3 categories
- Marijuana
- Prescription drugs
- Hard-drugs
- Estimated 75 of drug users are employed.
- Often more difficult to detect than alcohol.
- Estimated that 10 of fulltime employees in U.S.
currently use illicit drugs.
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33Drug Testing
- Many companies use drug testing for job
applicants and current employees. - Drug Testing less prevalent in small businesses.
- Certain legal risks involved in drug testing.
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34Drug Testing
- Criticism of drug-testing programs tend to focus
on off-duty conduct - Performance or impairment testing New form
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35Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs)
- Company-sponsored programs designed to help
employees with personal problems. Examples? - Help is not purely altruistic largely based on
Cost Savings.
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36Costs of Personal Problems
- Reduced Productivity
- Absenteeism and tardiness
- Increased costs of Insurance programs
- Lower Morale
- Friction among employees
- Grievances
- Permanent loss of trained employees due to
disability, retirement, and death - Loss of Business and/or damaged
public Image
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37Work/Life Programs
- Helps balance work and non-work demands.
- Programs include
- Flexible work schedules and Job sharing
- Telecommuting
- Flexible Benefits
- Wellness programs
- Child-care and Elder-care assistance
- Sick-leave policies
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38Wellness Programs
- Designed to prevent illness and enhance employee
wellness. - Examples?
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39Wellness Programs
- Benefits of wellness programs
- Fewer sick days
- Reduced coronary heart disease
- Lower major medical costs
- Increased employee productivity
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40Workplace Violence
- Homicides
- Physical attacks and Rapes
- Aggravated and other assaults
- All forms of harassment
- Any act creating a hostile work environment
- Nearly 5 of U.S. private businesses experienced
a violent incident in past 12 months - 5,500 incidents of workplace violence every day,
with 17 workplace homicides per week.
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41Workplace Violence
- Only 1 of companies have written policies on
workplace violence. - Companies need to avoid or prevent violence Best
protection may be the corporate culture. - Violence much less likely in environment where
employees feel appreciated and are treated with
respect.
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42Reducing Workplace Violence
- Hire carefully Screen out potential employees
whose histories show propensity to violence. - Reporting requirements for both violence and
threats of violence. - Adopt a zero tolerance policy
- Perpetrator of violence faces consequences.
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43Article 25 Putting the Hurt On
- How is OSHA enforcement changing (regulation by
shaming)? - How would the proposed Protecting Americas
Workers Act impact OSHA?
44Article 26 Workplace Bullying
- Anti-bullying legislation is being considered in
several states. - Should HR managers be concerned about proposed
legislation? - Is bullying a problem in the U.S. workplace?