International Safety


CPSC Approves Stronger Crib Safety

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) voted unanimously to approve new mandatory standards for full-size and non-full-size baby cribs as mandated by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA). The federal crib standards had not been updated in nearly 30 years and these new rules are expected to usher in a safer generation of cribs.

OSHA Appoints New Head of Construction Directorate

Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health David Michaels, Ph.D., MPH, has appointed Jim Maddux as the new director of the agency's Directorate of Construction, effective Monday, Dec. 20, 2010.

Court Grants MSHA Injunctive Relief against Maine Quarry

The Mine Safety and Health Administration announced recently that it successfully obtained a court order that imposes a number of requirements on Sullivan Granite Co. LLC, which operates Brown's Meadow Quarry in Franklin, Maine.

An image of a patient being tranferred to a trauma center.

Study Questions Two-Hour Trauma Transport Law in Illinois

Illinois law states that when hospitals need to transfer trauma patients to centers with higher levels of trauma care, such transfers should be made within two hours. A new study, published in the December issue of the Archives of Surgery, concludes that the two-hour mandate isn't cost-efficient because it does not lead to better patient outcomes.

FDA: Consumers Should Not Eat Sally Jackson Cheese Due to E. coli Risk

The Food and Drug Administration, in cooperation with other state and local public health agencies, is warning consumers not to eat any Sally Jackson cheeses. The products were processed under conditions that create a significant risk of contamination of the unpasteurized raw milk and finished cheese, and Sally Jackson cheeses have been identified as one possible source of eight cases of E. coli O157 infections in an ongoing investigation.

New Zealand Mine Re-entry May Come in March

Pike River Coal, the company that owns the mine where 29 miners died Nov. 19, has gone into receivership. The receivers presented a draft re-entry plan Dec. 22 to local police.

SAFEX International, based in Switzerland, has 110 members in 46 countries.

SAFEX International Developing Explosives Management Course

The Swiss organization's latest newsletter explains that development of the course is far along. Key issues to be covered have been determined, and the preliminary outline calls for eight modules.

British Telecom Fined $465,000 for Fatal Fall

The company was prosecuted after an employee suffered fatal head injuries in October 2006 when he fell from a wooden ladder.



Solis Appoints Five New NACOSH Members

Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis recently announced appointment of five new members to the National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety and Health. The new appointees will serve two-year terms and are leaders in the fields of medicine, academia and safety program development.

Lord Young on Oct. 15 recommended changing when lost-time injury cases must be reported.

30 Percent Fewer Cases Expected from UK Reporting Change

Savings of $8.6 million would result from one of the most important recommendations in the government's recent report to reduce the regulatory burden on employers.

Extech Recalls Digital Clamp Meters, Multimeters

About 6,200 instruments sold between January 2008 and November 2010 are being recalled in the United States and Canada.

CSB Hearing Today Gathers Top Offshore Experts

Some have experience in Britain's offshore sector, two with oilfields in Alaska, and others in Norway, Australia, and South America.

Comment Period Under Way for Australia's Model Regs

The deadline to comment on the 582-page document is April 4, 2011, and government safety agencies are urging employers and workers to participate as Australia moves toward harmonized regulations.

Occupational asthma costs are high, and U.K. employers bear little of the costs, a study found.

UK Employers Escaping Occupational Asthma Costs

Individuals and the government bear about all of the costs, according to the study.

PAHO Offering Spanish-Language Infection Control Course

Intended for health care workers and medical and nursing students, the interactive course is available free online.

CSB Hearing to Examine Regulation of Offshore Safety

Part of the investigation the board agreed to do after the April 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion, this Dec. 15 event will be a public hearing involving several international experts.

Efficiencies from an EU regulation and reduced use of animal testing are benefits to be gained by UK industry, the report says.

HSE Report Forecasts Big Savings from Biocides Rule

Improved procedures and lower testing costs are included in the industry's estimated savings of as much as 26.4 million pounds annually.

CPSC Data Shows Toy Recalls Declining, Toy Injuries Increasing

To help keep what has been called the most wonderful time of the year happy and incident-free, CPSC is encouraging consumers to adopt a three-pronged safety approach.

Lesley Haines is acting deputy secretary - workplace for the New Zealand Department of Labour.

Mine Investigation Largest Case Yet for New Zealand DOL

Eight staffers from the agency are involved. The Health and Safesty in Employment Act 1992 gives the department up to six months to investigate and file charges, if any. A third explosion inside the mine occurred Friday.

Boeing System Shows Airplanes' Health

A Chinese carrier has ordered the AHM system on a total of 117 planes that are in service or on order.

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