1 / 22

Evolution of Modern Health & Safety Concepts

Evolution of Modern Health & Safety Concepts. Tracing the historical development of heath & safety concerns and programs. Robert Emery, DrPH, CHP, CIH, CSP, RBP, CHMM, CPP, ARM Vice President for Safety, Health, Environment & Risk Management

Télécharger la présentation

Evolution of Modern Health & Safety Concepts

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. Evolution of Modern Health & Safety Concepts Tracing the historical development of heath & safety concerns and programs Robert Emery, DrPH, CHP, CIH, CSP, RBP, CHMM, CPP, ARM Vice President for Safety, Health, Environment & Risk Management The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Associate Professor of Occupational Health The University of Texas School of Public Health

  2. Earliest Civilization • Family groups expanded to tribes • Represented common interests, kinship • A practical principle developed: • the greatest ultimate good for the greatest number • thus, a person was not as important as the tribe, unless of course, it was the chief

  3. As Tribes Evolved • Successes of one tribe meant the downfall of another • Safety concerns centered around the tribe, and for select individuals • Only when a proliferation of injuries or illnesses afflicted large or noticeable numbers of individuals did the tribe act

  4. As Tribes Evolved • The first actions were probably against disease (great plagues) • Accidents were, for the most part, considered personal matters

  5. First Control of “Accidents” • Punishing countermeasures, not direct prevention • Hammurabi (2100 BC) ordered a compilation of a body of laws for Babylon • Known as the Code of Hammurabi, the rules were carved in cuneiform, now located in Paris

  6. Code of Hammurabi Examples • If shipping by sea and freight lost, must reimburse owner • If ship sank but was re-floated, half price reimbursement • If caused by a collision, decision of blame was based on who was anchored first

  7. Code of Hammurabi Examples • If a slave were injured (by other than the master) must pay master • If an ox gores a man, the act is only compensible if the ox was known to be mean

  8. Primary Motivation of Babylonians • Redress for damages • If prevention was intended, it was only an outcome of the punishing indemnification schedules

  9. Focusing on Occupational Hazards • In ancient times, most of the manual labor was performed by slaves • Slaves were considered to be valuable capital assets • Pliney the Elder (AD 23-79) wrote of the diseases of slaves

  10. Focusing on Occupational Hazards • Bernardo Ramazzini (1600’s) described diseases associated with various occupations • English Labor Regulations • excesses of apprentice system (children and subsequently women) • limits for mining operations (no children, women) • factory regulations for machine guarding

  11. Interesting Question • Why didn’t employers take control of situation to avoid the imposition of regulations?

  12. Follow-up Question • How many successful prosecutions do you think occurred?

  13. The Indemnification/Enforcement Approach • Advent of Worker’s Compensation • Master-servant relationship was historically close • Master concept has since grown into, perhaps, a corporation • Injured workes sought protection, indemnification, redress

  14. Worker’s Compensation • Three ironclad defenses: • contributory negligence • assumption of risk • fellow servant rule • Also, what employee would want to sue their employer? And what fellow employees might serve as witnesses?

  15. Worker’s Compensation • No fault insurance system developed • The only proof needed was that the injury occurred on the job • In general, medical bills covered, and a portion of salary provided • Events categorized as temporary or permanent, partial or total.

  16. Worker’s Compensation • Casualty insurance carriers motivated to keep accidents to a minimum • Insurance companies initated safety inspection services • what about this shift of attention and perhaps liability) from employer to insurance company?

  17. Experience Rating System • Problem overcome by use of experience rating system, which affected rates • (what about disincentive to report?) • Need for uniformity in reporting arose • In 1937, the ANSI Z16.1 method for compiling work injury data, was developed

  18. Other Notable Events • Public safety concerns and product liability laws • Advent of OSHA, 1970 • Environmental concerns • Evolution of specialties – industrial hygiene, health physics, biosafety • Other regulations, guidelines, standards of care

  19. Age of Selected Safety-Related Organizations(and parallel certifications) (CBSP)

  20. Review • The concept of safety evolved from a population-based, or tribal, approach • The first safety controls were punishing countermeasures • Indemnification approach evolved into worker’s compensation system • The master-servant relationship has changed dramatically

  21. Reference • Grimaldi, JV; Simonds, RH; Safety Management, Fifth Edition. American Society of Safety Enigneers, 1993.

  22. In Class Exercise • What does the health and safety function within an organization do today? • What is its mission? • Who are the stakeholders? • What are the hazards/risks? • How are they controlled or managed? • How are they evaluated, and by whom?

More Related