While the number of workplace
accident rates is on the decline in the U.S., a number of high-profile and
serious accidents in recent years has led to new safety processes. To create a
healthier and safer workplace, UL, a global safety science group, believes that
organizations must establish a culture in which employees actively identify
indicators of unsafe conditions—both through formal and informal
processes—before a crisis hits. In doing so, organizations can learn from
safety related failures or events that point to the potential for major
negative outcomes, and implement necessary changes.
“The evolution of safety in
the U.S. has a long and storied past with memorable tragic and catastrophic
events. Each one provides a unique perspective for how we can prevent future
events, if we take the time to learn from them,” said Todd Hohn, UL’s
global workplace health and safety director. “However, we also believe learning
happens through ongoing, day-to-day employee engagement in safety, not just
when a crisis occurs.”
Earlier this year, UL hosted
a workplace health and safety roundtable in which a number of participants
representing a cross-section of senior business executives, insurance and risk
management professionals, occupational medicine physicians, university faculty
members, research, and other subject matter experts came together to discuss
pressing issues in creating a workplace health and safety culture today. Some
of the discussions included:
- How process change can save money and improve performance
- The role of top management in creating a culture of safety
- Increasing workplace productivity, along with the bottom line, by addressing the health risks employees bring into the workplace
- Creating an organizational structure that enables a culture of health and safety
Traditionally, companies have
kept their health and safety functions separate, hindering collaboration. UL
believes it is crucial for organizations to integrate their health and safety
functions and participants spent extensive time discussing organizational
structures, alignment, and outcomes to improve performance.
When organizations succeed in
creating safer workplaces, it directly contributes to a better financial
performance. According to the National Safety Council, a workplace injury takes
place every six seconds. J. Paul Leigh, professor of Health Economics at
the School of Medicine and Department of Public Health Sciences with the University
of California, Davis, estimates that occupational illnesses and injuries cost
the American economy $250 billion each year due to medical expenses
and lost productivity.
In fall 2014, UL will issue a
free white book with insights from the roundtable and strategies for driving a
culture of health, safety and learning. Additional resources are currently
available through UL’s Workplace Health & Safety Journal.
“This was the first
roundtable, that I know of, in which senior executives from business, and
experts in health, safety, risk management, insurance, government and academia
have come together to take a holistic approach to health and safety and
continuous learning,” added Hohn. “Collectively we came to the conclusion that
business health relies on employee health and safety.”
Source: Today’s
Facility Manager
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