Hazard Identification and Assessment Guide

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**Hazard Identification and Assessment** One of the \"root causes\" of workplace injuries, illnesses, and incidents is the failure to identify or recognize hazards that are present, or that could have been anticipated. A critical element of any effective safety and health program is a proactive, on...

**Hazard Identification and Assessment** One of the \"root causes\" of workplace injuries, illnesses, and incidents is the failure to identify or recognize hazards that are present, or that could have been anticipated. A critical element of any effective safety and health program is a proactive, ongoing process to identify and assess such hazards. To identify and assess hazards, employers and workers: - Collect and review information about the hazards present or likely to be present in the workplace. - Conduct initial and periodic workplace inspections of the workplace to identify new or recurring hazards. - Investigate injuries, illnesses, incidents, and close calls/near misses to determine the underlying hazards, their causes, and safety and health program shortcomings. - Group similar incidents and identify trends in injuries, illnesses, and hazards reported. - Consider hazards associated with emergency or nonroutine situations. - Determine the severity and likelihood of incidents that could result for each hazard identified, and use this information to prioritize corrective actions. Some hazards, such as housekeeping and tripping hazards, can and should be fixed as they are found. Fixing hazards on the spot emphasizes the importance of safety and health and takes advantage of a safety leadership opportunity. To learn more about fixing other hazards identified using the processes described here, see \"[Hazard Prevention and Control](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-prevention).\" [**Action item 1: Collect existing information about workplace hazards**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai1) [**Action item 2: Inspect the workplace for safety hazards**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai2) [**Action item 3: Identify health hazards**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai3) [**Action item 4: Conduct incident investigations**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai4) [**Action item 5: Identify hazards associated with emergency and nonroutine situations**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai5) [**Action item 6: Characterize the nature of identified hazards, identify interim control measures, and prioritize the hazards for control**](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-Identification/#ai6) **Action item 1: Collect existing information about workplace hazards** Information on workplace hazards may already be available to employers and workers, from both internal and external sources. ***How to accomplish it*** Collect, organize, and review information with workers to determine what types of hazards may be present and which workers may be exposed or potentially exposed. Information available in the workplace may include: - Equipment and machinery operating manuals. - Safety Data Sheets (SDS) provided by chemical manufacturers. - Self-inspection reports and inspection reports from insurance carriers, government agencies, and consultants. - Records of previous injuries and illnesses, such as OSHA 300 and 301 logs and reports of incident investigations. - Workers\' compensation records and reports. - Patterns of frequently-occurring injuries and illnesses. - Exposure monitoring results, industrial hygiene assessments, and medical records (appropriately redacted to ensure patient/worker privacy). - Existing safety and health programs (lockout/tagout, confined spaces, process safety management, personal protective equipment, etc.). - Input from workers, including surveys or minutes from safety and health committee meetings. - Results of job hazard analyses, also known as job safety analyses. Information about hazards may be available from outside sources, such as: - OSHA, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) websites, publications, and alerts. - Trade associations. - Labor unions, state and local occupational safety and health committees/coalitions (\"COSH groups\"), and worker advocacy groups. - Safety and health consultants. **Action item 2: Inspect the workplace for safety hazards** Hazards can be introduced over time as workstations and processes change, equipment or tools become worn, maintenance is neglected, or housekeeping practices decline. Setting aside time to regularly inspect the workplace for hazards can help identify shortcomings so that they can be addressed before an incident occurs. ***How to accomplish it*** - Conduct regular inspections of all operations, equipment, work areas and facilities. Have workers participate on the inspection team and talk to them about hazards that they see or report. - Be sure to document inspections so you can later verify that hazardous conditions are corrected. Take photos or video of problem areas to facilitate later discussion and brainstorming about how to control them, and for use as learning aids. - Include all areas and activities in these inspections, such as storage and warehousing, facility and equipment maintenance, purchasing and office functions, and the activities of on-site contractors, subcontractors, and temporary employees. - Regularly inspect both plant vehicles (e.g., forklifts, powered industrial trucks) and transportation vehicles (e.g., cars, trucks). - Use checklists that highlight things to look for. Typical hazards fall into several major categories, such as those listed below; each workplace will have its own list: - General housekeeping - Slip, trip, and fall hazards - Electrical hazards - Equipment operation - Equipment maintenance - Fire protection - Work organization and process flow (including staffing and scheduling) - Work practices - Workplace violence - Ergonomic problems - Lack of emergency procedures - Before changing operations, workstations, or workflow; making major organizational changes; or introducing new equipment, materials, or processes, seek the input of workers and evaluate the planned changes for potential hazards and related risks. ***Note:*** Many hazards can be identified using common knowledge and available tools. For example, you can easily identify and correct hazards associated with broken stair rails and frayed electrical cords. Workers can be a very useful internal resource, especially if they are trained in how to identify and assess risks. **Action item 3: Identify health hazards** Identifying workers\' exposure to health hazards is typically more complex than identifying physical safety hazards. For example, gases and vapors may be invisible, often have no odor, and may not have an immediately noticeable harmful health effect. Health hazards include chemical hazards (solvents, adhesives, paints, toxic dusts, etc.), physical hazards (noise, radiation, heat, etc.), biological hazards (infectious diseases), and ergonomic risk factors (heavy lifting, repetitive motions, vibration). Reviewing workers\' medical records (appropriately redacted to ensure patient/worker privacy) can be useful in identifying health hazards associated with workplace exposures. ***How to accomplish it*** - Identify *chemical hazards* --review SDS and product labels to identify chemicals in your workplace that have low exposure limits, are highly volatile, or are used in large quantities or in unventilated spaces. Identify activities that may result in skin exposure to chemicals. - Identify *physical hazards* --identify any exposures to excessive noise (areas where you must raise your voice to be heard by others), elevated heat (indoor and outdoor), or sources of radiation (radioactive materials, X-rays, or radiofrequency radiation). - Identify *biological hazards* --determine whether workers may be exposed to sources of infectious diseases, molds, toxic or poisonous plants, or animal materials (fur or scat) capable of causing allergic reactions or occupational asthma. - Identify *ergonomic risk factors* --examine work activities that require heavy lifting, work above shoulder height, repetitive motions, or tasks with significant vibration. - Conduct *quantitative exposure assessments* --when possible, using air sampling or direct reading instruments. - *Review medical records* --to identify cases of musculoskeletal injuries, skin irritation or dermatitis, hearing loss, or lung disease that may be related to workplace exposures. ***Note:*** Identifying and assessing health hazards may require specialized knowledge. Small businesses can obtain free and confidential occupational safety and health advice services, including help identifying and assessing workplace hazards, through OSHA\'s [On-site Consultation Program](https://www.osha.gov/consultation). **Action item 4: Conduct incident investigations** Workplace incidents --including injuries, illnesses, close calls/near misses, and reports of other concerns-- provide a clear indication of where hazards exist. By thoroughly investigating incidents and reports, you will identify hazards that are likely to cause future harm. The purpose of an investigation must always be to identify the root causes (and there is often more than one) of the incident or concern, in order to prevent future occurrences. ***How to accomplish it*** - Develop a clear plan and procedure for conducting incident investigations, so that an investigation can begin immediately when an incident occurs. The plan should cover items such as: - Who will be involved - Lines of communication - Materials, equipment, and supplies needed - Reporting forms and templates - Train investigative teams on incident investigation techniques, emphasizing objectivity and open-mindedness throughout the investigation process. - Conduct investigations with a trained team that includes representatives of both management and workers. - Investigate close calls/near misses. - Identify and analyze root causes to address underlying program shortcomings that allowed the incidents to happen. - Communicate the results of the investigation to managers, supervisors, and workers to prevent recurrence. Effective incident investigations do not stop at identifying a single factor that triggered an incident. They ask the questions \"Why?\" and \"What led to the failure?\" For example, if a piece of equipment fails, a good investigation asks: \"Why did it fail?\" \"Was it maintained properly?\" \"Was it beyond its service life?\" and \"How could this failure have been prevented?\" Similarly, a good incident investigation does not stop when it concludes that a worker made an error. It asks such questions as: \"Was the worker provided with appropriate tools and time to do the work?\" \"Was the worker adequately trained?\" and \"Was the worker properly supervised?\" ***Note:*** OSHA has special reporting requirements for work-related incidents that lead to serious injury or a fatality (29 CFR 1904.39). OSHA must be notified within 8 hours of a work-related fatality, and within 24 hours of an amputation, loss of an eye, or inpatient hospitalization. **Action item 5: Identify hazards associated with emergency and nonroutine situations** Emergencies present hazards that need to be recognized and understood. Nonroutine or infrequent tasks, including maintenance and startup/shutdown activities, also present potential hazards. Plans and procedures need to be developed for responding appropriately and safely to hazards associated with foreseeable emergency scenarios and nonroutine situations. ***How to accomplish it*** - Identify foreseeable emergency scenarios and nonroutine tasks, taking into account the types of material and equipment in use and the location within the facility. Scenarios such as the following may be foreseeable: - Fires and explosions - Chemical releases - Hazardous material spills - Startups after planned or unplanned equipment shutdowns - Nonroutine tasks, such as infrequently performed maintenance activities - Structural collapse - Disease outbreaks - Weather emergencies and natural disasters - Medical emergencies - Workplace violence **Action item 6: Characterize the nature of identified hazards, identify interim control measures, and prioritize the hazards for control** The next step is to assess and understand the hazards identified and the types of incidents that could result from worker exposure to those hazards. This information can be used to develop interim controls and to prioritize [hazards for permanent control](https://www.osha.gov/safety-management/hazard-prevention). ***How to accomplish it*** - Evaluate each hazard by considering the severity of potential outcomes, the likelihood that an event or exposure will occur, and the number of workers who might be exposed. - Use interim control measures to protect workers until more permanent solutions can be implemented. - Prioritize the hazards so that those presenting the greatest risk are addressed first. Note, however, that employers have an ongoing obligation to control all serious recognized hazards and to protect workers. ***Note:*** \"Risk\" is the product of hazard and exposure. Thus, risk can be reduced by controlling or eliminating the hazard or by reducing workers\' exposure to hazards. An assessment of risk helps employers understand hazards in the context of their own workplace and prioritize hazards for permanent control. **Risk Assessment: How to Identify and Evaluate Workplace Safety Hazards** In a perfect world, no one would ever get hurt or killed at work. In the real world, unfortunately, [**hundreds of thousands of workplace accidents happen every year**](https://www.bls.gov/iif/)... But we're making progress. The rates of job-related injuries and deaths have [**fallen significantly**](https://www.osha.gov/osha40/timeline.html) over the last several decades. And if you're an employer or occupational health and safety professional, there's plenty you can do to bring the number of avoidable incidents at your organization closer and closer to zero. It starts with a risk assessment. **What Is a Risk Assessment?** **A risk assessment is an examination and evaluation of hazards present in a workplace**. It's the process of cataloging and classifying the various machines, equipment, operational procedures, employee behaviors and habits, working conditions, and other potential factors that could cause people harm. Most people do this naturally on some level. You might see an unguarded circular saw and think *yikes, that looks dangerous*, or spot a paint can teetering on the edge of a scaffolding plank and wince at the idea of it falling on someone's head. A risk assessment is a formalized, documented version of the same thought process. Like [**safety audits and inspections**](https://www.kpa.io/blog/safety-audits-and-inspections-a-kpa-consultants-view), **risk assessments are fundamental practices in the field of environment, health, and safety.** When you conduct a risk assessment, you not only uncover issues that threaten the health and safety of your workers, but also determine the severity and probability of those issues. It means asking "What's the worst that could happen?" and "What are the chances it will happen?" so that you can do everything in your power to prevent it from happening. A safety risk assessment can help you answer questions like... - How dangerous is your workplace? - What kinds of accidents should you be prepared for? - What's the most severe injury this machine can cause? - Is this personal protective equipment sufficient for that task? - Are your employees working as safely as they could be? - Are you doing everything you can to protect your people? This sort of information helps you make smarter decisions. The better you understand your risks, the better you can build your safety program, improve workforce training, use your EHS budget, and manage risks proactively---rather than waiting for incidents to occur. Risk assessments aren't just useful for controlling your internal safety results, but navigating your responsibilities with external stakeholders. Parties outside of your business, including your insurance provider, vendors, and contractors---along with regulators such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration---expect you to regularly conduct risk assessments. [**According to OSHA**](https://www.osha.gov/shpguidelines/hazard-Identification.html): "One of the 'root causes' of workplace injuries, illnesses, and incidents is the failure to identify or recognize hazards that are present, or that could have been anticipated. A critical element of any effective safety and health program is a proactive, ongoing process to identify and assess such hazards." If you fail to conduct risk assessments when necessary, you're putting your employees in jeopardy and your business on the line, increasing your prospects of regulatory enforcement, penalties, higher workers' compensation premiums, lawsuits, reputational damage, and more. **When Should You Conduct a Risk Assessment?** You should conduct risk assessments on a regular basis, such as **once per year or once every few months.** Additionally, it's important to assess workplace health and safety risks at any of the following moments: - before starting a new activity or task in the workplace - before changing work activities or tasks - when introducing new equipment, machines, or processes - before any new hires begin working - whenever existing employees take on new responsibilities - immediately after identifying or learning of a risk - following an accident or near-miss - when required to by OSHA or another regulatory authority **How Do You Conduct a Risk Assessment?** The format of a risk assessment and the steps entailed vary depending on the organization and context. Your business, workforce, and operations are unique---and so are your risks, as well as how best you can identify and manage those risks. That said, most risk assessments involve a few of the same general steps. Here's a basic outline for uncovering and addressing hazards in the workplace: **1. Plan it.** Before you begin, you'll need to nail down the details. What's the scope and size of your risk assessment? What kinds of risks will you be looking for: safety hazards, noncompliance issues, inefficiencies, all of the above? What will you be evaluating: the entire workplace, one department or location, a machine, a group of employees? Consider your risk assessment team. Which members of your organization will participate in the assessment, and who will be in charge of documenting information, reporting findings to leadership, following up on risk mitigation, and other tasks? What supplies, equipment, and other resources will the team need? Should you bring in [**a safety consultant**](https://www.kpa.io/blog/how-a-safety-consultant-can-improve-your-ehs-program-and-help-manage-your-risk) to lead or help coordinate the process? **2. Identify risks.** Once your risk assessment plan is in place, the next step is to find what you're looking for. [**OSHA recommends**](https://www.osha.gov/shpguidelines/hazard-Identification.html) the following: - Collect existing information about workplace hazards. - Inspect the workplace for safety hazards. - Identify health hazards. - Conduct incident investigations. - Identify hazards associated with emergency and non-routine situations. Be thorough in risk identification. Don't rely exclusively on visual and auditory observations and conjecture. Useful sources of information about risks include equipment operating manuals, material safety data sheets, results of inspections and audits, details of previous incidents, federal and state workplace safety regulations, and other safety documents and collections of workforce data. An experienced risk management expert ([**like the ones here at KPA**](https://www.kpa.io/workplace-health-safety-consulting)) can manage the process, interview workers, and use advanced analytics tools to make sure no hazards are overlooked. **3. Evaluate the risks.** Here's where the "assessment" part of risk assessment kicks into gear. Your job at this point is to make an actionable inventory of your findings---to untangle the most severe hazards and time-sensitive issues from the rest. Consider the following questions for each risk you've identified: - **What are the consequences? **How serious is the risk? Could it result in death or permanent, life-altering injuries for your workers? What would the financial impact look like for your organization? - **How likely is it? **What are the chances of the risk occurring and affecting your workforce? Is it related to a core aspect of your organization or something your workers deal with frequently---e.g. an everyday machine, tool, or process? Risk assessment professionals often use these two questions to assign scores to various issues and hazards and place risks on a **risk matrix, **a table that measures the consequences of risks against the likelihood of risks. **The most severe and most likely risks are the most dangerous. **Risk matrices vary in terms of detail, but usually include at least 3 columns and 3 rows, typically color-coded to indicate severity, as in the example below: ![](media/image2.png)[**Download an editable version of the Risk Assessment Matrix**](https://kpaioprod.wpenginepowered.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/KPA-Risk-Assessment-Worksheet-w-fields.pdf) **Next Steps** After you've identified and evaluated the risks that threaten the safety and health of your workers and your organization's bottom line, the next order of business is to manage the risks. Admittedly, this is easier said than done. Whether you need to replace equipment, retrain workers, institute new policies, or take a different course of action, it isn't always possible to put an end to the risks you face. But you can minimize them---and the safest, fastest, and most reliable way to do that is by using the **hierarchy of controls.** The [**hierarchy of controls**](https://www.kpa.io/blog/the-hierarchy-of-controls-is-the-best-defense-we-have-against-covid-19) is an approach to safety that structures protective measures into 5 stages, in order of most to least effective: 1. Elimination: physically remove the hazard. 2. Substitution: replace the hazard. 3. Engineering controls: isolate people from the hazard. 4. Administrative controls: change the way people work. 5. PPE: protect workers with equipment.

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