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TOOLS

Format:
PowerPoint

Size:
24 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members, safety champions, and frontline workers and supervisors.

Best used:
This companion to the Workplace Safety Primer helps frontline leaders teach others key principles of workplace safety and accident prevention.

Related material:
Workplace Safety Primer

 

Related tools:

TOOLS

Format:
PDF

Size:
Seven pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members, safety champions and frontline workers and supervisors

Best used:
This checklist of 31 potential hazards can help safety leaders and gardening/groundskeeping teams identify safety risks, propose solutions and resolve problems.

Related tools:

TOOLS

Format:
PDF

Size:
Six pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members and safety champions

Best used:
This checklist of 22 potential hazards can help workplace safety leaders and staff conduct onsite walk-throughs and identify safety risks for sterile processing workers.

Related tools:

Stretch Your Team to Workplace Safety

  • Developing stretching routines that target large muscle groups and various joint areas
  • Adding stretch routines that help lifting, pulling, pushing and twisting to daily 7 a.m. huddles
  • Discussing workplace safety at every morning huddle and encouraging full participation

What can your team do to prevent injuries? 

 

TOOLS

Format:
PDF

Size:
Seven pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members and safety champions

Best used:
This checklist of 31 potential hazards can help workplace safety leaders and workers conduct onsite walk-throughs and identify safety risks for maintenance staff.

Related tools:

New Needles Bruise Less, Please Patients

  • Identifying the problem was with the needle supplier
  • Filing a Responsible Reporting Form, and working together to arrive at the solution
  • Switching needle suppliers to improve care and safety

 What can your team do to listen to the voice of the patient? 

Injuries Nearly Vanish After Workers Find Their Voice

  • Training staff members to be Level 1 ergonomic assessors
  • Colleagues rounding on each other every month
  • Acting on employees’ concerns by making changes to workstations  

What can your team do to support each other's concerns? What else could your team do to follow up on issues?

 

Doctor Makes House Calls to Help Teams Avoid Injuries

Deck
Father’s trauma inspires joint effort to create safer workplace

Story body part 1

Quan Nguyen, DO, learned in seventh grade how devastating a workplace injury can be. His father, a carpenter, severed part of his thumb when he lost control of the power saw he was using. The accident put him out of work for a time and forced the family to stretch its skintight budget even further.

Years later, the memory inspired him to join Orange County’s Workplace Safety Steering Committee, says Dr. Nguyen.

“I’ve witnessed, firsthand, how things at work can lead to pain and suffering for the person and his family,” says Dr. Nguyen, a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician at the Chapman Medical Offices in Orange, California. “We’re like a big family at work and I don’t want to see people hurt.”

Team visits worksites to improve safety

As the sole physician on the 12-member committee, Dr. Nguyen uses his singular perspective to engage physicians and others to build a culture of workplace health and safety.

“He’s very unique,” says Jim Ovieda, assistant medical group administrator and the committee’s management tri-chair. “He brings another voice of authority to the conversation.”

Four years ago, Dr. Nguyen helped form the Tiger Team, a task force of union members and managers who visit units with high injury rates and offer expert advice on how to reduce risks. They developed a simple process to identify and address workplace hazards at the local level (see “Five Tips for Workplace Safety Site Visits”).

“It’s not a punishment. We’re there to help departments succeed and to help our staff and physicians to be safe,” says Dr. Nguyen, who named the Tiger Team in honor of “Tigger,” the fictional tiger character who bounces around and helps others.

Collaborating with frontline union members is vital to keeping everyone safe, says Dr. Nguyen.

“There seems to be two cultures inside the hospital – the physician and non-physician. We’re trying to bridge those two cultures by bringing together a diversity of voices to improve the culture of health and safety for everyone,” says Dr. Nguyen. 

Host teams say the visits and ensuing discussions help create an environment where everyone feels comfortable speaking up—essential to building safety into daily work.

Partnership approach gets results

The team aims for six site visits a year and had conducted 31 visits as of November 2015. Most of those departments reported significantly fewer injuries in the months after the visit; many reduced injuries by 50 percent or more. The approach has gained attention region-wide and other medical centers in Southern California are adopting the practice. The team also presented its partnership approach at the 2016 National Workplace Safety Summit.

“It’s a way of taking the pulse of the department,” Ronald Jackson, a medical assistant, SEIU-UHW member and the steering committee’s labor tri-chair, says of the team's site visits.

“We bring a fresh set of eyes to the department,” says Albert Alota, workplace safety coordinator for Orange County.

Three practical solutions

Recently, the committee’s labor and management members sat side by side reviewing workplace safety records for the Irvine Medical Center’s recovery room. The department had accrued nine injuries in as many months, three of them involving employees and gurneys. The team identified several hazards related to work space and storage and recommended ways to fix them. For example:

  • To address heavy traffic down narrow hallways and around blind corners: Provide standardized traffic flow for gurneys, mirrors at key intersections and a recognized verbal cue to alert bystanders to passing gurneys and equipment
  • To unclog crowded patient bays that forced staff to work at laptops in busy hallways: Install wall-mounted computers and exam stools to replace the office chairs in the room
  • To reduce injuries caused by incorrect use of new gurneys: Ask vendors to help train staff how to safely operate new equipment

Employees appreciate the attention. “It’s good to have the team come in,” says Sol Estrella, RN, a staff nurse and UNAC/UHCP member. “It shows that management and higher-ups are responding to our staff needs.”

 

Simple Signs Lead to Drop in Patient-Lifting Injuries
  • Using signs as a visual reminder to nurses and other staff to lift and transport patients safely
  • Communicating face-to-face and at huddles about patient-lifting equipment and procedures

What can your team do to remind each other to use patient-lifting procedures? What else could your team do to prevent injuries when lifting or transporting patients?

 

 

Laureen Lazarovici Fri, 08/26/2016 - 18:02

Total Health and Workplace Safety

Creating an Injury-Free Workplace

Deck
A manager's tips for leading on safety

Story body part 1

Leonard Hayes, manager of Environmental Services culture and training in the Northwest, oversees workplace safety for 125 outpatient EVS workers in five service areas. This includes the East Side service area, whose EVS unit he directly supervises and which has recorded no injuries for nearly five years. In February 2014, Hayes won the National Workplace Safety Individual Award. He spoke recently with Jennifer Gladwell, LMP communications consultant, about how he engages teams to work more safely.

Q. You and your department have achieved a great turnaround in workplace safety. How did you do it?

A. You have to give people information and recognition. Workplace safety is a standing item on our UBT agendas. We talk about working safely, acknowledge how well our teams do and tell them “thank you.” I’ve been put in this job to take away the myths that injuries are inevitable, so people can go home at the end of their shift and enjoy their time outside of KP.

Q. What do you do personally to engage your staff on safety?

A. I’m in there with them physically.  I’ve been a worker and I take interest in what the teams are doing. I try to make sure people know I care for them by being available to them and making sure they have the tools to do their job. I am committed to responding to issues as quickly as possible and resolving them. I have a great labor partner and co-lead, Sherri Pang. She’s been my anchor with the campus and the (East Side) team. She helps me a lot by sending emails, creating fliers, understanding and encouraging the team.