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Risk Assessment
Risk assessment-How
does it affect you?
You may have heard the term
risk assessment from visiting Environmental Health staff
carrying out inspections, from trade magazines and publications,
and from a variety of other sources. It follows the principle of
self management, where the employer is responsible for their own
workplace and how other groups of people, employees or public, are
affected by it. The principle underpinning this concept is to be
aware of hazards and control the risks.
Risk assessment is a legal
requirement under Regulation 3 of the Management of Health and
Safety at Work Regulations 1999. An employer or self-employed
person must carry out a suitable and sufficient assessment of the
risks arising out of or in connection with work to employees, the
public and themselves. Accidents often result in lost money, for
example, through staff illness, and compensation
claims.
What is risk
assessment?
A risk assessment is a thorough
examination of what could cause harm to people in your work.
The definitions for hazard and
risk are:
-
Hazard - is something with the potential
to cause harm, whether thats a substance, a piece of machinery, an
activity, the building itself or the method of work;
Regulation 3 of the Management of Health and
Safety at Work Regulations 1999 seeks to ensure that the hazards
are identified and assessed and action taken to minimise the
likelihood of the hazard(s) being realised.
How to do a
risk assessment?
Keep it simple,
The
Health and Safety Executive has devised a
logical sequence called "5 steps to Risk assessment"
| Step
1 |
Look for the
hazards. |
| Step
2 |
Decide who might be
harmed and how. |
| Step
3 |
Evaluate the risks and decide whether the
existing
precautions are adequate or more needs to
be done.
|
| Step
4 |
Record your findings,
inform affected employees. |
| Step
5 |
Review your assessment on a regular basis
or whenever
something changes and revise if
necessary.
|
Step 1 - Look for the
hazards
Take a look at the workplace, for example
awkward corners, a jutting drawer of the filing cabinet, how is
machinery used, practices in the workplace: are people zigzagging
past boxes that should have been stacked ages ago, while walking
over flexes consider the accident book, are there any accidents
that could have been prevented?
Be realistic and look for the obvious. In an
office, do you store the filing on a high shelf? How do people
place and retrieve the files? How heavy are they? How secure is the
shelf?
In a warehouse, do you know the maximum
weights you can safely stack? Do employees observe them? How do
they stack?
Look at potentially dangerous substances. Do
you have the safety data sheets, or manufacturers instructions in
the event of an accident?
Look for hazards that could cause injury or
affect several people. It is important to ask and involve your
employees, they know what happens on a day-to-day basis.
Consider how many people might be harmed and
how severe the worst case scenario would be. The more people in
danger and the more serious the accident, the more important the
controls become. Include specific groups of people such as young
workers, trainees, or pregnant people; they may need extra
consideration.
Each hazard has the potential to cause harm.
You have looked for the hazards, now you need to decide the
likelihood of them being realised.
Many activities in the workplace are covered
by regulations, such as dangerous machinery, hazardous substances,
manual handling, etc. Are you doing what the law asks you to? Have
industry guides, good trade practice and standards been put in
place?
You should aim to eliminate (if possible) and
certainly reduce the risk of the hazard occurring. The law says you
must do what is reasonably practicable to make your work
safe.
Draw up a priority action list, with hazards
that have the potential to cause the greatest harm and for the
highest number of people at the top of the list. Look at ways to
eliminate the hazard altogether. If that is not possible look to
control the hazards so that the chance of them being realised is
minimised.
When controlling risks follow the principles
below:
- try a less risky option, e.g. change from using a hazardous
substance to an alternative that is less hazardous;
- prevent access to the hazard (for example, by guarding or
restricting access to qualified staff);
- organise work to reduce exposure to the hazard;
- issue personal protective equipment, but make sure it does not
pose a second hazard;
- provide welfare facilities for example, washing facilities for
removing contamination.
It need not be expensive; installing a mirror
around a blind corner or putting non-slip mats on a slippery floor
are inexpensive precautions, or arranging for fire drills, to test
your fire precautions. Failure to take simple precautions can cost
a lot of money if an accident does happen.
The law on this is clear. Every employer and
every self-employed person must make a suitable and sufficient risk
assessment.
Ask yourself if you can demonstrate the
following:
- Identification of the hazards connected with your
work;
- considered the harm if the hazard were to be realised;
- asked who and how many people might be affected;
- action taken to minimise the hazard by controlling the
risk;
- the precautions are reasonable and the remaining risk is
low.
If you employ five or more people, you must
record your significant findings and keep the written record in an
easily retrievable format as proof for visiting inspectors or any
civil liability action. It helps to demonstrate you have done what
the law asks you to. Staff may also find it useful to refer to the
document.
Step 5 Review and
revision
Anything that introduces a hazard must trigger a review of the risk
assessment. For example, if you purchase new machinery, change a
process or procedure, you should review your risk assessment.
New hazards must be considered in their own right and, again, do
all you can to minimise or eliminate the risk.
It is good practice to review your assessment
on a regular basis to check for new hazards and see if the control
measures are still effective. Remember to involve your staff as
they often work with the hazards on a regular basis.
REMEMBER
Keep it simple and reduce the risk to the
lowest level reasonably practicable.
If you would like further advice, please
contact Environmental Health at the Civic Offices or telephone
(023) 9244 6654. Alternatively you can
email us or contact the HSE
Infoline on 08701 545500