|
1st Aid at Work Training Services The home of sensible & cost effective First Aid at Work Training
|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
|
|||||
|
|
First Aid training should be FUN! and not continuous chalk & talk. We achieve this by using an interactive style of training delivery with all students participating in the learning experience. We do not go for gory stories from the trainers but sensible realistic examples of what a student can expect in the workplace. Our courses are supplemented by full colour approved First Aid manuals and we only teach accepted First Aid protocols. Our trainers are all experienced in First Aid in the Workplace and all have or are working toward Adult education teaching qualifications.
|
|
|
Health & Safety RegsManual Handling Operations Regulations 1992OverviewThe incorrect handling of loads causes large numbers of injuries and can result in pain, time off work and sometimes permanent disablement. In fact, more than a quarter of all accidents reported each year to the enforcing authorities are associated with manual handling. The Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 do not, as is often believed, set legal limits for weights that can be lifted. Nor do they explicitly require training in manual handling techniques to be given - in fact they are one of the few sets of modern Regulations without an explicit training requirement contained within them. Rather, the Regulations require, where reasonably practicable, that manual handling is eliminated. Where it cannot be eliminated, then a risk assessment must be carried out where there is a risk of injury due to the manual handling operation. "Manual handling operations" are defined in the Regulations to mean "any transporting or supporting of a load (including the lifting, putting down, pushing, pulling, carrying or moving thereof) by hand or by bodily force". "Injury" is defined to exclude "injury caused by any toxic or corrosive substance" . Whereas, "load" is defined to include "any person and any animal". (Regulation 2). The Regulations require employers to carry out the following 3 key steps:
The main requirements of the Manual Handling Operations Regulations can be briefly outlined as follows:
for employees to undertake any manual handling operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured. (Regulation 4).
to undertake manual handling operations at work which involve a risk of their being injured, the employer shall carry out a suitable and sufficient assessment of all such manual handling operations. The assessment needs to consider the following: Task, Individual, Environment, Load and any Other Factors which might affect the manual handling operation. The assessment shall be reviewed where there is reason to suspect that it is no longer valid or where there has been a significant change. Where the review suggests changes to the assessment, the employer shall make them. (Regulation 4).
injury to employees undertaking manual handling operations to the lowest level reasonably practicable. (Regulation 4).
operations general indications and, where reasonable practicable, precise information on the weight of each load and the heaviest side of any load whose centre of gravity is not positioned centrally. (Regulation 4).
system of work provided for their use by the employer. (Regulation 5). Brief Guidance Concerning The Manual Handling Operations AssessmentWhile deciding whether or not a risk of injury exists with regard to a particular manual handling operation, the following guidance may prove helpful.
Where the operation is well within the guidance figures, a simple checklist will suffice. Where the operation is close to the guidance figures, a more detailed assessment will be needed. Where the operation exceeds the guidance figures by twice as much, the operation should be subject to close scrutiny.
Put simply, a 10kg load carried close to the body between shoulder and knuckle height is well within the "boundary condition" given by the above diagram (20-25kg) and a very simple assessment would be enough. The same load carried outstretched at shoulder to elbow height would be close to the boundary condition and require a detailed assessment. The same load carried outstretched at either above shoulder height or below mid lower leg height would be twice the boundary condition (5kg) and require close scrutiny.
In addition, the following factors have to be taken into account when comparing the actual manual handling operation with the boundary conditions illustrated in the diagram above.
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Resuscitation Council UK
|