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What’s an Arm and Leg Worth?  Take a Stand to Stop Amputations Today!

What’s an Arm and Leg Worth?  Take a Stand to Stop Amputations Today!. Region VI OSHA. Arkansas Louisiana Oklahoma Texas New Mexico State Plan. Controlling Amputation Hazards.

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What’s an Arm and Leg Worth?  Take a Stand to Stop Amputations Today!

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  1. What’s an Arm and Leg Worth?  Take a Stand to Stop Amputations Today!

  2. Region VI OSHA • Arkansas • Louisiana • Oklahoma • Texas • New Mexico State Plan

  3. Controlling Amputation Hazards Safeguarding is essential for protecting employees from needless and preventable injury. A good rule to remember is: Any machine part, function, or process that may cause injury must be safeguarded.

  4. OSHA Definition: Amputation • An amputation is the traumatic loss of all or part of a limb or other external body part. This would include fingertip amputations with or without bone loss; medical amputation resulting from irreparable damage; and amputations of body parts that have since been reattached.

  5. What is a Loss of an Eye? • Loss of an eye is the physical removal of the eye. This includes enucleation and evisceration. Does loss of an eye include loss of sight? • No. Loss of sight without the physical removal of the eye is not reportable under the requirements of section 1904.39. However, a case involving loss of sight that results in the in-patient hospitalization of the worker within 24 hours of the work-related incident is reportable.

  6. Region VI -Recordkeeping Reporting

  7. FY 15 - Recordkeeping Reporting

  8. FY 16 - Recordkeeping Reporting

  9. FY 17 - Recordkeeping Reporting

  10. FY 18 – Recordkeeping Reporting

  11. FY 19 – Recordkeeping Reporting

  12. CY 2015 – CY 2019 Comparison

  13. Amputations by NAICS

  14. Top 3 Industries by NAICS

  15. Why an amputation prevention stand-down? 692 Amputations for CY 2018 Top industries • 31-33 Manufacturing 314 (45%) • 21 Mining 90 (13%) • 23 Construction 84 (12%) Almost exactly the same from FY 2017

  16. Amputations by Area Offices

  17. Machinery Associated with Amputations • Mechanical Power Presses • Power Press Brakes • Powered and Non-Powered Conveyors • Printing Presses • Roll-Forming and Roll-Bending Machines • Shearing Machines • Food Slicers • Meat Grinders • Meat-Cutting Band Saws • Drill Presses • Milling Machines • Grinding Machines • Slitters

  18. Common Machinery Hazards Physical Hazards Health Hazards Noise Chemicals Dust Fumes Exertion Vibration Illumination • Fire • Temperature • Equipment • Energy • Material • Machine • Falls

  19. Hazardous Activities • Machine set-up/threading/preparation,* • Machine inspection,* • Normal production operations, • Clearing jams,* • Machine adjustments,* • Cleaning of machine,* • Lubricating of machine parts,* and • Scheduled and unscheduled maintenance.* *These activities are servicing and/or maintenance activities.

  20. What types of machine components are hazardous? • Point of Operation – the area of a machine where it performs work on material • Power-Transmission Apparatuses – flywheels, pulleys, belts, chains, couplings, spindles, cams, and gear in addition to connecting rods and other machine components that transmit energy • Other Moving Parts – machine components that move during machine operation such as reciprocating, rotating, and transverse moving parts as well as auxiliary machine parts

  21. What kinds of mechanical motion are hazardous? • Rotating • Reciprocating • Transversing • Cutting • Punching • Shearing • Bending

  22. Protect Workers from Amputations • Guards provide physical barriers that prevent access to hazardous areas. • Devices help prevent contact with points of operation and may replace or supplement guards.

  23. Criteria for Machine Safeguarding • Prevents worker contact with the hazard area during the operating cycle. • Avoids creating additional hazards. • Is secure, tamper-resistant, and durable. • Avoids interfering with normal operation of the machine. • Allows for safe lubrication and maintenance.

  24. Reporting Fatalities, Hospitalization, etc. • Work-related fatalities must be reported within8 hours • In-patienthospitalizationsmust be reported within24hours • Amputationsmust be reported within24 hours • Loss of an eye must be reported within 24 hours

  25. Report a Fatality or Severe Injury • All employers are required to notify OSHA when an employee is killed on the job or suffers a work-related hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye. • A fatality must be reported within 8 hours. • An in-patient hospitalization, amputation, or eye loss must be reported within 24 hours.

  26. OSHA Standards Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) to protect workers from amputations in the workplace: • 29 CFR Part 1910 Subparts O and P cover machinery and machine guarding • 29 CFR 1926 Subpart I covers hand tools and powered tools • 29 CFR Part 1928 Subpart D covers agricultural equipment • 29 CFR Part 1915 Subparts C, H, and J; • 29 CFR Part 1917 Subparts B, C, and G; • 29 CFR Part 1918 Subparts F, G, and H cover maritime operations

  27. Help is Available • OTI Education Centers, course descriptions, prerequisites and a searchable course schedule that includes training locations and fees can be found at: www.osha.gov/otiec • Resources specifically for small businesses, including information about OSHA’s free On-site Consultation program, can be found at www.osha.gov/smallbusiness • OSHA provides help for employers, including technical assistance about effective safety and health programs, training and education at www.osha.gov/employers

  28. OSHA Training Institute Education Centers

  29. www.osha.gov 800-321-OSHA (6742)

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