Sonntag, 4. September 2016 - 10:55
Ineke Leclercq (Marketing Director at Rivo, “the #1 cloud platform for EHS & operational risk management”) posted a message in linkedin about her blog article “How to streamline Incident Management”. The article has six sections:
- Identify all likely incidents
- Create a safety committee
- Involve employees
- Implement an efficient notification system
- Simplify data collection and usage
- Continually review and revise
Now, which kind of incidents need to be managed?
Based on clause 3.8 and 3.9 in OHSAS 18001:2007 there are 12 kinds of incidents:
Download: http://platinumcsr.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/IncidentClassification_OHSAS18001.pdf
Kategorien: Gefährdungsbeurteilung
Tags: Englisch, incident categories, OHSAS 18001, Vorfallskategorien
Mittwoch, 9. September 2015 - 00:15
These incident catecories are based on definition 3.8 and 3.9 in OHSAS 18001:2007. The data should be easy to obtain. Just quarterly categorize OH&S incidents using the twelve categories shown below. Then count the incidents per category and enter the sums for each category into the table.
In words:
Incidents which …
1.1.1.1 … have caused physical ill health
1.1.1.2 … have worsened physical ill health
1.1.2.1 … could have caused physical ill health
1.1.2.2 … could have worsened physical ill health
1.2.1.1 … have caused mental ill health
1.2.1.2 … have worsened mental ill health
1.2.2.1 … could have caused mental ill health
1.2.2.2 … could have worsened mental ill health
2._.1._ … have caused injury
2._.2._ … could have caused injury
3._.1._ … have caused fatality
3._.2._ … could have caused fatality
Or in other words (even closer to OHSAS 18001:2007):
Incidents in which …
1.1.1.1 … physical ill health occurred
1.1.1.2 … physical ill health worsened
1.1.2.1 … physical ill health could have occurred
1.1.2.2 … physical ill health could have worsened
1.2.1.1 … mental ill health occurred
1.2.1.2 … mental ill health worsened
1.2.2.1 … mental ill health could have occurred
1.2.2.2 … mental ill health could have worsened
2._.1._ … injury occurred
2._.2._ … injury could have occurred
3._.1._ … fatality occurred
3._.2._ … fatality could have occurred
“Incident” and “ill health” according to OHSAS 18001:
The underlined words met resistance from employers when moving from OHSAS 18001:1999 to OHSAS 18001:2007. In internal communications they tried to replace “ill health” by “desease” and “identifiable” by “diagnosable”. They also tried to hide “regardless of severity” from their employees. “Made worse” was not welcome, as the term did not allow them to reject incidents which worsened an already existing ill health. And “could” was a challenge to employers, because due to that term they could not ask affected employees to prove that they actually suffered from ill health. The reasons for resisting against “mental” where quite similar to the reasons for mentioning “psychological factors” only in the notes to clause 7.1.4 of ISO 9000:2015 rather than clearly in the clause itself.
Discussion:
Download:
Kategorien: Berichterstattung, Checklisten, psybel
Tags: Auditoren, Betriebsräte als Auditoren, dickes Brett, Englisch, incident categories, ISO 45001 (English), ISO 45001 2nd CD, ISO 45001 proposal, KPI, mental45001, Nachhaltigkeitsberichte, Nutzer A, OHSAS 18001, OHSAS 18001 Intro, Vorfallskategorien