1 / 28

Optimization of Safety Efforts Using Accident Avoidance & Other Analysis Techniques

Optimization of Safety Efforts Using Accident Avoidance & Other Analysis Techniques. International HEP Technical Safety Forum Jack J. Hahn SLAC. Today’s Talk. Provide overview of some SLAC “Safety Excellence” analysis methods Describe three Safety Analysis approaches

oshin
Télécharger la présentation

Optimization of Safety Efforts Using Accident Avoidance & Other Analysis Techniques

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. Optimization of Safety Efforts Using Accident Avoidance & Other Analysis Techniques International HEP Technical Safety Forum Jack J. Hahn SLAC

  2. Today’s Talk • Provide overview of some SLAC “Safety Excellence” analysis methods • Describe three Safety Analysis approaches • Accident Avoidance Analysis technique • Work associated with most common accidents • Work associated with most serious accidents (Department of Energy Laboratories) • Show some analysis information shared with all laboratory staff • Challenges/Issues for safety progress through Safety Analysis

  3. “Safety Excellence” vs “Compliance” • Analysis for “Safety Excellence” (topic today) • Goal to Reduce: • Most common injuries and illnesses • Goal to Prevent • Most serious injuries and illnesses • Methods not necessarily required by Safety regulations (U.S. OSHA 1910, OSHA 1926), may exceed them • Optimization of safety effort • Compliance (important also, not today’s topic) • Goal to comply with regulatory requirements • Thousands of pages of regulations • Must do it all • Use supervision, audits and self-inspection techniques for “analysis”

  4. How is Safety Analysis Used? • One part of a multi-part safety program • You have opportunity to talk to entire staff about safety • You have 10 minutes • You want to provide the potential to make a difference • Something that everyone can relate to? • Results right away? • Tool for improvement teams at the lab • Tool for defense of safety capital investment decisions • Building/Accelerator/Walkway design?

  5. What is “Accident Avoidance Analysis”? • Based on consideration of a number of historical near-miss incidents or accident events • Thought experiment by safety professional (s). (credits to John Turek, Ishwar Garg) • Semi-quantitative evaluation of relative merits of techniques in preventing the incident or injury. • Benefit of additional steps

  6. Accident Avoidance Points (AAP’s) • Would have prevented accident/incident/injury - 1 point • May have prevented accident/incident - .5 point • Would not have prevented accident/incident - 0 points

  7. Accident Avoidance Examples • Employee moving equipment, splinter embedded under nail- Use of Gloves = 1 Point- would have prevented injury/accident. • Employee was crawling on hands and knees under beamline, stood up and hit head on magnet- Use of Hardhat = 1 Point, Sufficient workspace to perform task .5 points (may have prevented accident)

  8. Most Efficient Remedies to Prevent Common Accidents Lab-Wide? • # of Accident Avoidance Points/Cost of Remedy • Rough relative value - Precise cost estimates not suggested nor required. May point out fixes that can be accomplished in short to medium term. • Information recently developed- Not used • Limitations • Order of magnitude of cost effectiveness of solutions, not precise • Decision making should seldom be based only on cost effectiveness • Costs based on prevention of only those events observed- Could be refined, not done in this example

  9. Analysis of Work Associated with Most Common Accidents • Original Laboratory Approach- • By Type - Stains/strains/slips, trips, falls • By Division & Department • “Analysis of Work” method- • Welding related injuries? • Material handling related injuries? • Similar “Analysis of Work for Common Accidents” info from today’s talk presented site-wide in August 2004

  10. What Types of Work are Associated with SLAC’s Most Common Recordable Injuries/Illnesses? (2003/2004 partial) Computer Work Chemical Use Construction Ladder Use Cut/Saw/Drill Machining Lifting

  11. What Types of Work are Associated with SLAC’s Most Common Recordable Injuries/Illnesses? (2003/2004 partial) cont. Moving Body Material Handling All Other Walking Stair Use Wrench Use Welding

  12. WALKING - 11 Accidents - What could be done? • Watch where we are going- 6 • Poor footing- 1 • Jobsite housekeeping- 1 • Rate- 1 • Facility condition- 1 • Design/Mitigation Ideas • Minimize sudden change of elevations - curbs • Pathway clearance from objects • Don’t exclude walking in Job Hazard Analysis and Mitigation (JHAM) Walking

  13. MATERIAL HANDLING- 11 Accidents - What could be done? • Excess manual force- 4? • No gloves- 3 • Proper cart / hand trucks- 2 • Unstable body position- 1 • Avoid falling objects- 1 • Design/Mitigation Ideas • Long term plan- decrease manual/increase powered lifting • Job Planning- Safety meetings discuss options Material Handling

  14. STAIR USE - 5 Accidents - What could be done? • No handrail use- 3 • Rate- 2 • No handtruck-1 • Splinter from handrail- 1 • Design/Mitigation • Establish culture of using handrails • Avoid carrying items that prevent you from using handrail/seeing • Design OSHA compliant handrails • Safety meetings/Job Hazard Analysis Stair Use

  15. Preventing Some of the Most Serious Accidents - Ladder Safety • Pick the right ladder • Don’t use a ladder that is too short • Inspect the ladder • Climb with both hands free • Include ladder safety in JHAM

  16. Preventing Some of the Most Serious Accidents- Electrical Safety • Work de-energized whenever possible • If not, approach the situation with redundant controls • Electrical Gloves • Mats • Hard hat in keeping with the rules • Appropriate Clothing • Of course include electrical work in safety planning

  17. Analysis of Work Associated with Most Serious Accidents • Review/Summarize 28 Selected Department of Energy (DOE) Type A & B Investigations Apr 1997- Oct 2001 • Look Nationally over a number of years, to obtain reasonable sample size for analysis

  18. What Qualifies as a Department of Energy (DOE) Type A or B Accident/Incident? • Type A & B precisely defined in DOE order • Type A’s (Worst) includes • injury, chemical or biological exposure resulting in • 1 or more fatalities • 3 or more persons with “serious” injuries • Property Accidents > 2.5M • Type B’s (Bad) includes • Injury, chemical or biological exposure resulting in • 1 or more persons having “serious” injuries • Property Accidents > 1 M

  19. Review/Summarize Relevant DOE Type A & B Incident Investigative Reports GENERAL WORK TYPE - # OF INVESTIGATIONS Construction- 9 Maintenance- 8 No Activity- 3 Environmental Work- 2 Transportation- 2 Demolition- 1 Research- 1 Material Handling- 1 Helicopter- 1 Total- 28

  20. Review/Summarize Relevant DOE Type A & B Incident Investigative Reports (cont.) Detailed Work Categories- # incidents Electrical- 8 working in substations- 3 working on power lines- 1 switchgear- 1 motor control center- 1 jackhammer- 1 microwave, student taking measurements- 1

  21. Review/Summarize Relevant DOE Type A & B Incident Investigative Reports (cont.) Detailed Work Categories- # incidents Tree Falling Under Power Lines- 2 Heavy Equipment - Material snagged - 2

  22. DOE Fatalities for Work Relevant to SLAC, as Reported in Type A Reports • Tree Falling- Power Line Maintenance-1 • Electrical- De-energized Power Line- Induced Current - 1 • Grading- Run Over By Equipment - 1 • Heating and Air Conditioning Work- Fall From Height - 1

  23. Electrical- Substation 3 Tree Falling- Power Line 2 Heavy Equipment- Material snagged 2 Leaking Fluid 2 HVAC 2 Painting 1 Electrical- Motor Control Center 1 Asbestos Work 1 Drilling Rig 1 Electrical- Power Line 1 Grading 1 Helicopter- Bad Weather 1 Hoisting and Rigging 1 Jackhammer 1 Janitorial 1 Hauling 1 Microwave 1 Rooftop Work 1 Switchgear 1 Environmental Sampling 1 Traffic accident on public road starts fire 1 Waste 1 TOTAL 28 List of Detailed Work Type A’s or B’s

  24. Conclusions Regarding Hazardous from DOE Data, and Judgment • Hazardous Work- In order of certainty? • Conventional construction • Building very large high energy physics facilities • Conventional maintenance • Electrical work- Especially high voltage work, substation work. • Tree falling? • Maintenance of Power Lines? • Heavy Equipment Snagging Material? • Research - Not much type A or B activity seen • Exotic Experimental Equipment - Not much type A or B activity

  25. Challenges/Issues for Safety Progress Through Safety Analysis • People don’t always listen or agree • One-time communication not likely to change ingrained behaviors- need follow-on communication • Need to have programs that generate “habit strength”? • Uniform Hazard Analysis? • Behavior Based Safety? • Establish requirements in HEP labs for common behaviors such as hand rail usage, or watching where we are going? Is this going too far? Why?

More Related