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Department Safety Coordinator Training

Department Safety Coordinator Training. Summer/Fall 2005. Welcome EH&S Associates. Topics Risk Management & Workers’ Comp Emergency Preparedness/ Emergency Management Open Forum. Workers’ Compensation Susan Johnston sjohnston@ucsd.edu x40136. YESTERDAY….

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Department Safety Coordinator Training

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  1. Department Safety Coordinator Training Summer/Fall 2005

  2. Welcome EH&S Associates • Topics • Risk Management & Workers’ Comp • Emergency Preparedness/ Emergency Management • Open Forum

  3. Workers’ Compensation Susan Johnston sjohnston@ucsd.edu x40136

  4. YESTERDAY… Injured UCSD campus employees were required to call the Workers’ Compensation office to report any work-related injury or illness, so the WC office could initiate the Report of Injury form. Injured employees were also responsible for informing their supervisor of the injury/illness.

  5. TODAY… Employees will NO LONGER call the Workers’ Compensation Office to report their injuries. (They are still welcome to call with questions) EMPLOYEES ARE TO: Immediately inform their supervisor of the injury, and Complete the Incident Report form and FAX the form to the Workers’ Compensation Office within 24 hours.

  6. Immediate Notification If completion of the form by the supervisor or medical provider will delay the form being faxed to the Workers’ Compensation Office within 24 hours – THEN Initially fax the front page of the form (Employee Section) (Required information is a bold) And then fax the completed form ASAP!!!

  7. Patience Please… While the Workers’ Compensation office is: • Educating the campus community of the changes (form and new reporting procedures)… We will be in a state of flux and transition for a few months

  8. In a Perfect World • Employee is to obtain Incident Report form • hard copy from department • downloaded from http://blink.ucsd.edu/go/workerscomp and then complete the Employee Section of the form. (If Employee is unable to initiate processing of Incident Reporting form, supervisor is to start the process and forward the form within 24 hours to the Workers’ Compensation Office.)

  9. Perfect World- continued… 2. Supervisor completes the Supervisor Section If no medical treatment is required at this time, the form is to be Immediately faxed to the Workers’ Compensation Office 858.534.5202

  10. PW still continued… If medical treatment IS required: Employee should bring the form to the medical facility AND ask the physician to complete the MEDICAL SECTION • Employee must then fax the completed form to the WC office IMMEDIATELY.

  11. But what if…. get form?? get treatment?? What if the injured employee needs to seek medical treatment, but is unable to obtain “the form” prior to seeking medical?

  12. What Should the Employee Do? Go to Thornton Emergency Room and obtain medical treatment – • Thornton ER will have the forms available Obtaining necessary medical treatment is the 1st PRIORITY!!

  13. Then what? If employee is able to return to work after receiving medical treatment… All parties should complete the form and then fax itIMMEDIATELYto the WC office 858.534.5202

  14. What if… Employee is NOT able to return to work after receiving medical treatment: • Employee must immediately notify the supervisor or departmental contact person to complete the form to the best of their ability, and • The supervisor or department must Immediately fax the form to the WC office 858.534.5202

  15. Rapid Reporting of Incidents… • Is absolutely key to assuring: • Good medical recovery (so authorization for further testing or treatment won’t be delayed) • Reducing lost days • Overall costs • Litigation

  16. Risk Management Diana Olson diolson@ucsd.edu x43820

  17. Risk Management:Blink-Based (Information) Resource • Risk Management is a division of EH&S • On Blink click Safety tab, then Risk Management on the left http://blink.ucsd.edu/go/riskinsurance • We have 32 different insurance programs we manage, some self insured some bought • There is also automatic coverages and by request coverages • Also included in our services are handling business Lawsuits and Subpoenas served to the University

  18. UCSD Driver Responsibilities • All drivers of UCSD vehicles should receive this page (available on our Blink Page under Forms) • Risk Management can come to staff meetings and present this in about 20 minutes • Any drivers that have gotten into accidents should take this training or fleet service training as a retraining • There are two Staff Education courses that cover this material too (What you don’t know might bite you and Cars & Property: Your Personal Risks)

  19. How To File A Fire or Flood Claim • Call Risk Management to report the incident as soon as possible • This page can be found on our Blink site under How to • Reimbursement may be available to recoup costs incurred • There are exclusions to the self insured property program and deductibles • If certain procedures aren’t followed, reimbursement may not be available

  20. What To Consider WhenPlanning A Field Trip • This list is available on our Blink Site under How to • Any activity off campus is considered a Field Trip • Where are you going? How are you getting there? Other precautions • Waivers are necessary • Deductibles may be charged to a department if not planned properly and an incident occurs • Risk Management can present this training at your department

  21. Indemnification Wording & Certificates of Insurance • Anytime we deal with an outside entity, whether coming on Campus or using their services, a High Value Purchase Order should be used • Purchasing will make sure Certificates are obtained and mutual indemnification wording is used • Departments may be responsible for incidents if Certificates and indemnification wording is one sided against The Regents • i.e..-Truck rentals, Hotel rentals, Off campus visits to locations, Caterers, Bus rentals, Equipment rentals, etc.

  22. Dealing with Emergencies at UCSD Beth Maples emaples@ucsd.edu x43823

  23. Agenda • Programs in Place • Emergency Response Protocol • What You Can Do To Prepare • Initiatives/Next Steps

  24. Programs • Campus & Departmental Emergency Plans • Emergency Operations Center • Policy Group • After Hours Duty Responders • HAZMAT Team • Crisis Communications • Department Emergency Action Plan • Regional Emergency Response and Emergency Supply Containers • Exercises and Training

  25. Emergency Response ProtocolDuring Normal Business Hours

  26. Emergency Response ProtocolAfter Normal Business Hours

  27. Recent EventsOctober 2003 Wildland Fires

  28. What can you do to prepare? • Identify Department Safety Coordinator • Emergency Action Plan: Address evacuation, assembly areas, instructions on what to do during specific emergency situations (fire, earthquake, flood, bomb threat, etc) • Has your department “plan” been communicated to you? • Phone lists for faculty, staff & lab personnel • Development of safety teams within your department • Assemble emergency kits for home, work & car(s) • Contact me for assistance with emergency plan?

  29. Regional Emergency Response & Supply Containers • Regional map on Blink • Regions vs. Zones • CERT: Community (Campus) Emergency Response Team • Training held at UCSD in January • Outreach to campus • Emergency supply containers • Currently being refurbished, replaced & restocked • Locations • Access after an emergency

  30. Automatic External Defibrillators • AED Locations on campus • CPR/AED Training

  31. Initiatives/Next Steps • Communicate Need for Preparedness, Raise Awareness - September as Campus Preparedness Month - Development of CERT -Assist DSC’s with Emergency Action Plans - Automatic External Defibrillator (AED) Training • Conduct Emergency Exercise - Scheduled for Tuesday, November 15th , 2005 http://blink.ucsd.edu/menu/emergency

  32. Emergency Response Field Exercise 8/20/2004

  33. DSC Program Rich Belmontez rbelmontez@ucsd.edu x25974

  34. Prioritization of EH&S Web-Based Tutorials - August 2005 I. Already Developed: 1. Ergonomics 2. Hazardous Materials / Laboratories 3. Hazardous Materials / Shop 4. Bloodborne Pathogens II. Current Priorities: 1. General Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) 2. Back Safety 3. Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) / Lab Safety for Professionals (LSP) 4. Medical Provider Network Training 5. Fire Extinguisher Use

  35. Department Safety Coordinator Certificate The Department Safety Coordinator (DSC) Certificate is intended to improve workplace safety culture by enhancing human relation skills and knowledge, and by exposure to a broad array of Environment, Health, and Safety courses. The certificate focus is development of essential, safety leadership competencies such as facilitating, communicating, planning, goal setting, problem solving, and decision making. Safety coordinators are designated by the department or work unit supervisor, manager or principal investigator; please visit the related Blink page to find out more about safety coordinators. Enrollment eligibility: You are eligible to participate in this certificate if you currently provide safety coordinator duties to your department/work unit, or if you desire to improve leadership skills and knowledge in the area of occupational and environmental health and safety. Certificate requirements: If you enroll in the certificate program, you are expected to take these courses: • Computer Ergonomics • Hazardous Waste Training • Risk Management: What Might Bite You • Department Safety Coordinator Training • Fire Extinguisher Training • Environmental Stewardship

  36. Model for DSC Resource Page on Blink

  37. Terminology • DSC- Department Safety Coordinator • Lower hazard, non-shop/studio, non-lab/research • ASC- Area Safety Coordinator • Higher hazard, shop/studio, lab/research • DSO- Department Safety Officer • Official department capacity; professional ASC/DSC • Medicine • Bioengineering • Pathology • Physics • Chem/Biochem • SIO • Biological Sciences

  38. Good Fortunes

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