Still providing health and safety services to London and the UK - I just have to face up to Ryanair rather than the Central Line these days.
Life style choice ..... like the French need my safety advice from a man who attempts to speak French like a 2 year old with a Yorkshire accent.
Still providing health and safety services to London and the UK - I just have to face up to Ryanair rather than the Central Line these days.
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The last year rather got away from me ....... so many things to do ..... so blogs rather fell off the radar. But catch up coming soon - well that or I'll say sorry next July again
I'm suprised to find myself plugging an app for phones but eventually someone had to make something useful.
St John s have developed and made available an "app" for Smartphones and things - effectively a simple first aid manual for your phone. Its available via iTunes or Google Play - and details can be found here http://www.stjohnwales.org.uk/store/first-aid-app Definitely a useful little tool for First Aiders and Appointed Persons. I'm not entirely convinced anyone's thought this through fully. The International Organisation for Standards (ISO) are good at idealism - their new standard for developing countries and seismic assessment (will they survive an earthquake) I applaud for its aim but it does seem a touch of step with the underlying issues in the developing world. Buildings are built to what we in the West would consider poor standards for a lot of reasons - poverty, lack of effective regulation and given the huge issues facing the developing world earthquakes tend to fall low down the list. Charging for the standard somewhat ensures that it can't/won't get adopted by anyone but Western companies looking to make quick assessments on their buildings. But its available through the ISO here. A slightly odd little tale here. Quick read of the tabloids and the Coroners words and its all health and safety gone mad again; read a bit deeper and your sympathies shift.
In a nutshell three men managed to put their car upside down in a flooded ditch - 2 escaped relatively unhurt and one was injured. His friends got him out of the car but couldn't get him up the steep banks. When paramedics finally arrived - after long delays calling them - the crew "risk assessed" the situation and decided it was too dangerous to enter the ditch. A policeman arrived afterwards and came to a different decision diving in and helping get the injured man to the bank where the paramedics then treated him. The coroner then made a number of statements -
Now there have been some odd decisions made in the past - but strip this down a little. Its the middle of the night, the bank was so steep the police the following day had problems measuring its depth and unless you were there its hard to decide what you'd have done. The paramedics have not made any individual statements but have been backed by their employers. Equally the Coroner also stated he didn't know if the paramedics had come to a different decision they'd have been able to save him. Paramedics normally rely on the Fire Brigade and Police in these situations so we're not talking a full rescue crew with ladders and ropes - we're talking two guys in the middle of nowhere with no rescue gear. Take away the words risk assessment and just say the two medics made a decision. Oh and really minor point - the car was driven by a drunk driver who has since been prosecuted. So obviously lets blame the paramedics not the drunk driving ............ sorry but think you're aiming at the wrong target. If the dead man had been walking home and hit by the car it would be the drivers fault - but put your car and passengers upside down in a ditch its the medics fault...... of course it is. I have no idea if the paramedics decision was right - I wasn't there and most of us don't have to make decisions of this magnitude in the middle of the night. Last time I checked not all paramedics are employed for being young, fit, strong swimmers - so lets leave the poor buggers alone its a hard enough job already without armchair critics still living in the 1950's sniping at them. You really do wonder sometimes. A builder was prosecuted, July, by the HSE after not only being found working on an unsafe scaffold but also having his ten year old son on the scaffold with him. His son was seen shimmying along a narrow plank on the scaffolding, gripping to the frame to prevent him falling, as he made his way towards the top of a ladder where his dad was waiting for him. The ladder was not tall enough to reach the lowest working platform on the scaffolding - missing it by around 30cm. The builder therefore had to hold his son's ankles and place his feet onto the rungs of the ladder to make sure he did not fall or miss his footing. There's a long list of issues with the scaffold so its an interesting approach to parenting shall we say. Full story is here on the HSE website During the heatwave of the last few days its just been reported that two Territorial Army members died of heat exhaustion whilst training on the Brecon Beacons over the weekend with a third ill in hospital. Full details have not yet been announced.
In some ways it seems surprising - heat stress normally shows early signs and after the last few decades the army would have generally been thought to be well aware of the risks. Working in hot climates - normally outside the UK - does bring risks especially when combined with with physical exertion. But anyone working outdoors especially in physical work should ensure they keep hydrated (at least 4 litres of water per day in this heat), try to reduce the caffeine intake and take the obvious precautions against sun burn. Most importantly listen to your body and keep an eye on those around you. The NHS link below gives a good overview of the symptoms but keeping it simple:
Once you get beyond those symptoms the risks and effects start to jump quite quickly - confusion, increasingly poor co-ordination are the first signs obvious to others around you. http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Heat-exhaustion-and-heatstroke/Pages/Symptoms.aspx For anyone working outdoors whether in this heatwave or elsewhere in the world - drink water, keep your body salts topped up using fruit juice or energy drinks, find shade when you can and hats can help shade your scalp during peak temperatures - but most importantly listen to your body - the signs of both dehydration and heat stress can be felt at an early stage. Draft/Consultation documents have been published by the HSE for proposed changes to asbestos regulations in the UK. Anyone interested can see the Consultation document here at the HSE web site or download a copy below
From October there'll be another revision to RIDDOR. After moving the goal posts last year - the old 3 days off work due to an accident became 7 days off work - they've now simplified (reduced) the number of Occupational Diseases that need reporting and also simplified the "major accidents" that need reporting. On the whole probably a good thing - I will of course have one of my moments in 2 years time when the HSE/Government proclaim major improvements in safety because the number of reportable accidents is lower than in 2012 - cynic me? In many ways RIDDOR was set in the past so simplification is good for us all - but I do recognise that any past statistics are of dubious value to compare going forwards. You can download a free draft of the new Regs/Guidance here - HSE Downloads In some ways it feels like beating a puppy .......... but I do have to say something. The HSE set up a myth busters panel a year or so back of the great and good to comment on the raft of "elf and safety stories" doing the rounds. It all sounds like a good idea but given in general you can look at the stories and sum up the response in a phrase involving sex and travel quite why it needs a panel of the great and good to state the obvious is beyond me.
Its just an expensive way of getting to they're an idiot - except at no point does anyone say someone was an over zealous muppet with no brains and a clip board. Or maybe that's why I never get asked for an opinion. http://www.hse.gov.uk/news/judith-risk-assessment/myth-busting030413.htm I know its well meant - but equally if you want to manage the press and their portrayal of health and safety the rather nice but dull output here is never going to make more than a paragraph near the end of the article. Come on I know the HSE are never going to say "which idiot came up with that" (now that would get a headline) but they really need to learn how the world and the press work. |
AuthorChris Elliott is a health and safety advisor with a wide range of experience. Working with a range of clients from local business to high profile TV shows. Archives
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