1 / 25

Post Incident/Injury Response

Post Incident/Injury Response. Presented by:. Purpose. To ensure management/supervision responds appropriately and with confidence in the event of an incident. Learning Objective. At the conclusion of this training you will be able to: Follow appropriate steps following an injury

aine
Télécharger la présentation

Post Incident/Injury Response

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Post Incident/Injury Response Presented by:

  2. Purpose To ensure management/supervision responds appropriately and with confidence in the event of an incident.

  3. Learning Objective At the conclusion of this training you will be able to: • Follow appropriate steps following an injury • Minimize the chance for future injuries Additionally you will : • Establish relevant facts as to the how and why an incident occurred • Determine the root cause of any incident • Draw conclusions to what must be done to prevent reoccurrence

  4. Definition • Incident- General term used to refer to any work related injury, medical emergency, or near miss • LTA (Lost Time Accident) – An injury that causes an employee to miss his/her next scheduled shift • Medical Emergency- A sudden illness that occurs to a person that is not work related (heart attack, diabetic emergency)

  5. Definition Continued • Near Miss Accident – A hazardous and undesirable event that does not cause injury • ORA (OSHA Recordable Accident) – Any injury that requires medical treatment, as defined by OSHA (stitches, prescription for medication) • Work-Related Injury – An injury that occurs at work

  6. Near Misses • Complete Accident Investigation Report • Investigate and document as if an injury happened

  7. Initial Response to Incident • Show genuine concern for the well-being of the person • Determine the severity of the illness or injury • Contact the Safety and Environmental Department or First Responder if necessary

  8. Determining Severity of Emergency • Does the person appear to need medical treatment? • Does the person want to seek medical treatment?

  9. Injury and Incident Forms • Nurse’s office • Safety Coordinators office

  10. If Medical Treatment is not required or desired • Employee completes an Injury Report immediately • Witnesses complete an Injury Report Witness Statement Immediately • Superintendent Completes an Accident Investigation Report within 24 hours • Original report is sent to Nurse

  11. Medical Emergencies Requiring Medical Treatment (non-work related) • Contact the Safety and Environmental Department on 1st Shift • Contact a First Responder on 2nd and 3rd Shift • If you are unsure if Medical Treatment is necessary contact Safety and Environmental on the emergency numbers • Drug and Alcohol Screen is not required since it is not work related • Transportation to medical facility is by EMS or Family member only

  12. Work Related Injury Requiring Medical Treatment • Employee completes an Injury Report immediately if appropriate at the time • Any witnesses complete an Injury Report Witness Statement immediately • Superintendent completes an Accident Investigation Report within 24 hours • Employee must complete an Alcohol and Drug Screen at the time of medical treatment

  13. Transportation to Preferred Provider for Work Related Injuries • Public EMS will take a person with severe injuries • Private Ambulance or Taxi will take a person with less severe injuries • Family Member may take a person with a non-work related illness or injury NOTE: Employees may not transport injured or ill workers

  14. Investigation Why do we do investigations? To Prevent anyone else from being injured.

  15. Investigation • All injuries and near misses are to be investigated by the Superintendent • This includes completion of Accident Investigation Report and requires appropriate investigation • The investigation is conducted without delay to prevent reoccurrence • Accident and near miss investigations are fact finding, not fault finding

  16. Investigations • Document everything • Isolate the scene (i.e. LOTO) • Collect only the facts • Interview all witnesses and bystanders • Recreate events and document • Fix simple issues (i.e. Poor Housekeeping) • Maintenance work order (include with report)

  17. Gather Information • Assemble a Team of cross functional workgroups if necessary • Interviewing the injured employee as primary source of information • Interviewing witnesses to the incident or near miss to determine critical factors • Assessing the accident scene by interviewing employee at the scene • Re-enactment of the accident to review circumstances to get a more precise picture • Reconstruction of the accident by means of controlled imagination applied to clue

  18. Root Cause • All injuries and incidences can be prevented. • It is important to determine the root cause of an incident • The root cause of all near miss or first aid injuries must be properly investigated and corrected to reduce the potential of the incidents reoccurring as a disabling injury • Most injuries can be traced back to an unsafe act of a worker

  19. Injury Prevention • Determine ways to prevent a reoccurrence • Implement action on a prevention plan • Communicate any improvements, repairs or changes to Employees • Conduct follow-up to ensure prevention plan was implemented and continues to be implemented

  20. Show concern for the well being of your employees • Get phone number to call and inform relative • Follow up call to injured employee next day • Communicate any resulting repairs or work modifications to all employees

  21. Forklift Incident • Remove the person from Forklift until retrained • Inform Safety Coordinators of retraining • Discipline: Come forward vs hide • Drug and Alcohol screen for damage

  22. Reward vs. Discipline • Tactful approach • Care enough about employees that you will discipline them so they don’t hurt themselves or others • Reward simple safety items

  23. Superintendant Responsibility • If you must discipline: Don’t tell them its because safety said so, your boss is making you or those are the rules. • Tell them you are concerned for their well-being and you don’t want to see them get hurt.

  24. Proactive Injury Prevention • “Everyone knows this doesn’t work” • “Everyone knows that this is a problem” • “Everyone knows that hasn’t worked for a while” • “You know what you need to do for safety” • If someone brings you a safety issue, ask them if they have a solution to the issue.

  25. Conclusion • Respond to emergencies with confidence • Complete thorough investigation following a near miss or injury • Complete and submit necessary forms • Encourage Employees to take responsibility for their well being (They are responsible for their own injury) • Injuries do not just happen to people without their control • Push for our goal of zero incidences and injuries

More Related