This presentation provides an overview of occupational health and safety. It defines key terms like hazards and outlines the goals of OH&S programs. The document discusses the historical development of modern OH&S, from ancient Egypt to modern legislation. It also examines the economic, legal, and moral imperatives for health and safety, and identifies the main stakeholders and their roles. Barriers to effective OH&S are identified, as well as the importance of partnerships among stakeholders.
This presentation provides an overview of occupational health and safety. It defines key terms like hazards and outlines the goals of OH&S programs. The document discusses the historical development of modern OH&S, from ancient Egypt to modern legislation. It also examines the economic, legal, and moral imperatives for health and safety, and identifies the main stakeholders and their roles. Barriers to effective OH&S are identified, as well as the importance of partnerships among stakeholders.
What Is Occupational Health and Safety? • Occupational Health and Safety (OH&S) – The identification, evaluation, and control of hazards associated with the work environment • Hazard – Any source of potential adverse health effect, damage, or harm on something or someone under certain conditions at work – Hazards include chemical, biological, physical, and psychological agents
What Is Occupational Health and Safety? • Occupational Health & Safety Programs Goal of OH&S Programs • Reduce occupational injury and illness Occupational Injury • Any cut, fracture, sprain, or amputation resulting from a workplace incident Occupational Illness • Any abnormal condition or disorder caused by exposure to environmental factors associated with employment
Why we need OH&S Rail Disaster at Lac-Mégantic • In July 2013, railway cars filled with crude oil derailed and smashed into downtown Lac- Mégantic. • 47 people died and much of the town was destroyed. • The TSB found 18 different contributing factors including poor company safety culture and unresolved mechanical issues previously identified by Transport Canada.
OH&S Statistics • Workplace Fatalities, Injuries, and Illness in Canada – Around 1000–1100 workers die yearly as a result of workplace incidents – Interpretation of workplace fatality and injury data should take into account how many people work in each industry, region, and the reporting requirements in each area
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Began in Ancient Egypt – Stonemasons and potters experienced respiratory problems • Industrial Revolution – Advent of new industries and occupations resulted in new health and safety-related problems • Brown lung disease caused by excessive inhalation of dust
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Changing Perspectives on Risk and Liability – Until the early 20th century the prevailing model for workplace hazards was the assumption of risk • Belief that a worker accepted the risks of employment when he or she accepted a job • Associated is the view that injuries were caused by accident-prone people
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Changing Perspectives on Risk and Liability – Accident proneness • The notion that some individuals are inherently more likely than others to be involved in accidents, as a result of individual characteristics
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Late 19th century – Ontario legislation established safety standards (machine guards). • Early 20th century – Canadian jurisdictions passed factory laws to regulate heating, lighting, ventilation, hygiene, fire safety, and accident reporting.
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Royal Commission on Relations of Capital and Labour in Canada (1889) – Commissioners made several recommendations: • Improving health and safety by establishing standards and mandating regular inspections • System for compensating victims of industrial accidents, regardless of who was at fault • Labour bureau to be created to oversee these activities
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Royal Commission on the Health and Safety of Workers in Mines – In 1974, the three principal rights of workers first articulated: • Right to refuse dangerous work without penalty • Right to participate in identifying and correcting health and safety problems • Right to know about hazards in the workplace
Historical Development of Modern Occupational Health and Safety • Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System (WHMIS) legislation passed (1988; revised in 2015) – Reflects the fundamental right of workers to know about potential workplace hazards • Changes to the Criminal Code to allow for criminal charges for some OH&S violations (2004) • OH&S incorporates physical and mental health
Imperatives for Health and Safety • Economic Considerations – Work-related injury costs are direct and indirect – Costs of workplace injuries estimated at 4% of the world GDP – Estimates of cost are likely underestimated: • Injuries are not accurately reported • Statistics do not adequately capture illnesses caused or exacerbated by exposure to workplace conditions
Imperatives for Health and Safety • Legal Considerations – OH&S acts provide legal rights to safe workplaces for every worker – Due diligence: • Expected standard of conduct that requires employers to take every reasonable precaution to ensure safety
Imperatives for Health and Safety • Moral Considerations – Ethical arguments that safety is the “right” focus for employers – Workers have a responsibility to learn about and enact safety and health practices – Management commitment to health and safety results in higher levels of employee motivation to work safely and better organizational safety records
The Stakeholders • Government – Legislation • Occupational Health & Safety Acts • Workers’ Compensation Acts – Support Knowledge Sharing and Research on OH&S • E.g., Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS) was established by federal government to provide health and safety information to any worker who requests it
The Stakeholders • Employers – Prepare written OH&S policy and display prominently in workplace – Provide and maintain equipment, materials, and protective devices – Ensure manner in which the work is performed is safe, and environment is free from hazards and serious risks
The Stakeholders • Employees – Perform duties and tasks in safe and responsible manner – Wear protective equipment in compliance with company and legislative regulations – Report defective equipment and other workplace hazards to safety professional, joint health and safety committee, or manager
The Stakeholders • Organized Labour (or Unions) – Take part in the joint occupational health and safety committee – Bring emerging problems and issues in health and safety to attention of government and employers – Pressure other stakeholders to take corrective action – Use collective bargaining process to incorporate health and safety provisions in many contracts
Internal Responsibility System • Backbone of Canadian OH&S legislation • Internal responsibility system (IRS) – The system of shared responsibility for health and safety that is the basis for most Canadian OH&S legislation • Primary responsibility rests with workplace and not government regulators
Barriers • Employers who value production over safety • Employers who focus on safety only when they feel they must – E.g., cleaning up the worksite only when there is safety inspection • Employers may be uninformed or lack confidence about safety concerns
Partnerships • Alliances among stakeholders can help overcome barriers to OH&S programs – Emphasis of shared goals can facilitate partnerships • Parties within a workplace can form effective OH&S partnerships – E.g., employer, employees, and union • Broader groups of stakeholders can also partner to promote OH&S – E.g., workers’ compensation boards and industry safety associations
Occupational Health and Safety Professionals • Broad array of backgrounds can develop careers in the OH&S field – E.g., industrial hygiene, occupational medicine, workplace wellness promotion, OH&S training • Safety certifications, such as CRSP®, help companies identify individuals with relevant OH&S training • Companies may employ a range of OH&S professionals or may delegate OH&S responsibilities to an HR generalist and contract out specialized OH&S services to third parties
Occupational Health & Safety Professionals • Canadian Registered Safety Professionals (CRSP®) are recognized experts • Many organizations require individuals in the field to hold this designation • CRSPs have training in: – Hazard identification and analysis – Incident severity evaluation – Development and communication of hazard control policies
The Role of Human Resources • Traditional views of safety emphasized the three Es: – Engineering – Education – Enforcement • Three Es do not provide a total solution • Focusing on people side of safety is likely to result in a safer workplace
The Role of Human Resources • Safety is often managed under the human resources function in organizations for several reasons: – Safety is integrated into other human resource functions • E.g., training , job design, scheduling – Safety requires legislative compliance – Safety decreases costs