Machinery: Friend or foe?

TrainingOnline.com
Tags: workplace safety

The answer to the question posed in the headline above depends on safeguards and safe work practices.

A huge proportion of the productivity of industrial nations like ours, dependent on machines, is often taken for granted!

Hour after hour, in businesses of all sizes, these workhorses respond to the men and women who operate them – by pounding, cutting, crushing, welding, stitching or whatever other task they were designed for, to fashion the products that will be marketed to hungry consumers. But there is a fearful downside to this scenario: the machine cannot distinguish between a piece of wood, steel or fabric and the operator’s body. It does not know that the dust, splinters, sparks or metal chips that are an offshoot of its work may fly into the operator’s eyes, face and lungs with devastating effect. Instead, it is the workers and their managers and supervisors who must recognize these dangers and act to guard against them.

How do they go about this?

Employers must:

Employees must:

The upshot? When employers make sure that both their machines and their machine operators work safely, the benefits are many: fewer injuries, less material waste, and the reduced cost resulting from both.

About the author:
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