1 / 14

TOOL BOX TALKS

TOOL BOX TALKS. Health and Safety Hazards in Children’s Services. WHS Legislation. • Section 19 requires an employer to ensure the health, safety and wellbeing of workers and others in the workplace. All places where work is undertaken by a worker is regarded as the workplace

wlamontagne
Download Presentation

TOOL BOX TALKS

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. TOOL BOX TALKS Health and Safety Hazards in Children’s Services

  2. WHS Legislation • Section 19 requires an employer to ensure the health, safety and wellbeing of workers and others in the workplace. All places where work is undertaken by a worker is regarded as the workplace • Section 28 of the WHS Act 2012 places a legal obligations on all workers to ensure their own health and safety and the health and safety of others whilst at work.

  3. WHS Consultation • Employer must consult with workers prior to making any changes which may affect health and safety i.e. when doing risk assessments, implementing or changing risk controls, changing systems of work, facilities at work etc. • Consultation should be direct with affected staff and via H&S Representative or WHS Committee for general WHS issues.

  4. Risk Assessment • Undertaken on equipment, premises and activities so that safe work procedures can be developed. • Also undertaken on individual children/students prior to enrolment/admission and regularly or as need arises. • Known hazards include lifting and moving children and equipment, storing equipment, materials and toys, bending, kneeling and squatting, working in the kitchen, fire emergencies, intruders, excursions, chemicals, infectious diseases, driving, working in the kitchen and bullying, harassment and stress. • Monitor and evaluate effectiveness of controls via workplace inspections etc.

  5. Lifting and Moving Children and Equipment - Solutions • Minimise bending by providing and using equipment such as height-adjustable change tables and cots • Encourage child to walk or climb steps whilst holding your hand • Ensure large bulky or awkward items easily move e.g. fit castors or wheels to sand-pit covers and playground equipment, use wheeled trolleys or frames for laundry bags and height-adjustable trolleys for shifting goods in and out of vehicles.

  6. Storing equipment, materials and toys - solutions • Position storage/shelves between shoulder and knee height or provide stools or ladders, preferably with hand-rails, to access stored objects without over-reaching • Dryers and washing machines should be able to be loaded at the best working zone (i.e. between shoulder and waist height)

  7. Bending, kneeling, squatting - solutions • Height adjustable change table with steps if child walking • If not able to use change table, kneel on a padded surface with child’s feet directly in front of worker • Adults should use adult furniture (e.g. height adjustable chair which can be lowered to child’s level) when engaging with children

  8. Working in Kitchen - solutions • Reduce repetitive movements by purchasing prepared food, or provide powered aids e.g. food processors, electric can openers • Use job rotation to ensure workers are not exposed to repetitive actions for long periods • Keep area tidy and clean up spills immediately • Avoid carrying hot food, especially liquids over long distances • Regulate hot water temperature so no scalds

  9. Infectious Diseases - solutions • Use ‘universal precautions’ when dealing with body fluids whether from child or linen etc. • Consider vaccinations for hepatitis A, measles/mumps/rubella or pertussis (whooping cough).

  10. Chemicals - solutions • Minimise use of toxic substances without compromising hygiene • Ensure product is labelled and stored out of reach of children • Display warning signs and procedures for safe storage of chemicals • Obtain safety data sheets from manufacturers/suppliers and ensure safe work practices followed including use of PPE • Do not expose children to fumes or sprays

  11. Electrical - solutions • Ensure safety cut-off switch in use • Keep electrical cords, double adaptors and power boards out of children’s reach • Cover unused power points with protective caps • Regularly inspect all electrical cords and test and tag those in hazardous environments

  12. Excursions • Risk assess suitability of activity for individual children • Undertake venue assessments on regularly used venues • Undertake pre-use checks on day of visit and implement any measures required • Provide staff with authority to cancel or change if risk cannot be controlled • Ensure adequate adult/child ratios

  13. Bullying, harassment & stress • Have clear policies communicated to all staff and parents • Encourage effective communication and provide clear roles and reasonable control over work tasks • Provide post-incident care, including counselling and support

  14. Safety/security • Inspect all areas visually daily • Practice evacuation drills regularly • Check all equipment regularly • Keep records of maintenance and repair • Have trained first aiders and kits available • Develop signal and procedure for intruder dangers • Ensure communication system available if working alone in area and if working at external environments • Ensure adequate lighting if work after hours

More Related