PPE


Bad Assumptions About Hearing Protection

Any good proof is based upon assumptions. If the assumptions are good, the proof is valid. If the assumptions are bad, then the proof is worthless—or, as writer Angelo Donghia puts it, “Assumption is the mother of screw-up.”

Australia's Workers Urged to Focus on Safe Work Week

All working Australians should concentrate on and be involved in safety at their workplaces Oct. 19-25, the Australian Safety and Compensation Council says.

NIOSH Funds Follow-Up Hearing Study

"This is a one-of-a-kind opportunity to see if early intervention to prevent noise-induced hearing loss can be sustained over time," said Barbara Marlenga, Ph.D., a research scientist with the Marshfield Clinic's National Farm Medicine Center.

Sperian Buying Fast-Growing UK Fall Protection Company

The purchase price for Combisafe is about $93 million. The company provides fall prevention consulting services and distributes its products in northern Europe, Dubai, and Australia.

OSHA Metal Industry Focus Leads to $114,000 in Fines for Ohio Foundry

The site was charged with one willful LOTO violation and 39 serious violations, including 23 safety and 16 health regulation issues.

OSHA Proposes Clarification of PPE, Training Requirements

Yesterday, OSHA published in the Federal Register a proposed rule to clarify the individualized nature of the requirement to provide personal protective equipment (PPE) and training for workers. This proposal affects PPE and training in general industry, maritime, and construction. The public comment period on the proposed regulation will be open for 30 days.

Releases, Injuries Prompt Review of Britain's Offshore Industry

The Health and Safety Executive warns that “basic safety systems are not being followed,” and minor problems can lead to major catastrophes.

OSHA Clarifying Per-Employee Duty in Standards

Today's proposed rule responds to OSHRC decisions and makes explicit employers' duty to train and provide respiratory protection in particular to each employee.



Hong Kong Tries Awards to Boost Food Service Safety

Cash prizes will be used to reduce accidents in this sector -- among the highest for all trades in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, its Labor Department reports.

GHSA Alarmed by Another Year of Higher Motorcycle Deaths

Its chairman sees "a few signs for optimism" in latest DOT report, which estimated 41,059 people died in U.S. highway crashes last year.

ASM Thermal Spray Society Issues PPE Safety Guidelines

Recommendations in the downloadable document are consistent with OSHA's Personal Protective Equipment Standard (29 CFR 1910.132-138) and presented in the context of thermal spraying, the society says.

Foundry Faces $128,700 in Fines after Local Emphasis Program Crackdown

"Handling dangerous chemicals, electrical hazards, and machine guarding problems are issues that should not exist at any worksite," said Richard Gilgrist, director of OSHA's area office in Cincinnati.

New Online Safety Social Network Seeks Traction

Workplace safety professionals who want the ability to interact with each other more than just once a year at trade shows and conferences now have a new resource.

Arc Protection Around World

Globalization is good for you! Keep saying it (even if you don’t believe it): It really is good for everyone. Things change, and the individuals and companies that can improve, innovate, and automate will win.

Upcoming Safety Conferences: Chicagoland Safety & Health and SHARP/VVP

This year marks the 20th anniversary for the Chicagoland Safety & Health Conference, co-sponsored by the OSHA and slated for September 15-18 at Northern Illinois University, 1120 E. Diehl Road in Naperville.

The Right Gloves are Out There

Hands and fingers are always close to the action, so they need appropriate protection. How do employees know which hand protection they should use? They don’t, unless they’re aware of the hazard(s) and wear the necessary PPE.

Climbing Lines Recalled Due to Fall Hazard

The manufacturer says the defective ropes--sold at retailers nationwide from August 2006 through June 2008 for between $180 and $262--can break, posing a serious fall hazard for climbers.

Hospital Infection Control Survey Highlights Hand Hygiene

Many respondents indicated that their hospital had achieved hand hygiene compliance of 70 percent or higher before as well as after patient contact.

Iowa Enforcing Higher Work Zone Speeding Fines

A state worker who had been hit four times by moving vehicles testified to Iowa legislators earlier this year about why the bill was needed.

Review of Silicosis Deaths Points to Continued Overexposures

In the era of legally enforceable exposure limits, deaths in the 15-44 age group should be lower, two NIOSH researchers concluded.

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