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Safety & Health Movement

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Presentation on theme: "Safety & Health Movement"— Presentation transcript:

1 Safety & Health Movement
Historical Perspective and Overview Safety & Health Movement

2 Safety Movement Has developed steadily since the early 1900’s.
Industrial accidents were commonplace in this country. In 1907 over 3,200 people were killed in mining accidents.

3 Safety Movement Legislation, precedent, and public opinion all favored management. Few protections for workers’ safety. Today working conditions have improved. The current death rate from work-related injuries is less than a third of the rate 50 years ago.

4 Before the Industrial Revolution
Safety & health laws begins in the days of the ancient Babylonians, circa 2000 BC. The code of Hammurabi. Contained clauses dealing with injuries, allowable fees for physicians, and monetary damages assessed against those who injured others.

5 Before the Industrial Revolution
The movement continued with the Egyptian civilization. Rameses II (circa 1500 BC), undertook a major construction project. To be successful, Rameses created an industrial medical service to care for workers.

6 Before the Industrial Revolution
They were required to bathe daily in the Nile, and were given regular medical examinations. Sick workers were isolated.

7 Before the Industrial Revolution
The Romans were also concerned with safety & health. They built aqueducts, sewerage systems, public bathes, latrines, and well-ventilated houses.

8 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1867 Massachusetts introduces factory inspections. 1868 patent is awarded for the first barrier safeguard. 1869 Pennsylvania passes law requiring two exists from all mines, and the Bureau of labor Statistics is formed.

9 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1877 Massachusetts passes a law requiring safeguards on hazardous machines, and the Employer’s liability law is passed. 1892 First recorded safety program is established. 1900 Fredrick Taylor conducts first systematic studies of efficiency in manufacturing.

10 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1907 Bureau of Mines is created by U.S. Department of the Interior. 1908 Concept of workers compensation is introduced in the United States. 1911 Wisconsin passes the first effective workers’ compensation law in the United States.

11 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1911 New Jersey becomes the first state to uphold a workers compensation law. 1912 First Cooperative Safety Congress meets in Milwaukee. 1913 National Council of Industrial Safety is formed. 1915 NCIS changes its name to National Safety Council.

12 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1916 Concept of negligent manufacture is established (product liability). 1936 National Silicosis Conference convened by the U.S. secretary of Labor. 1970 Occupational Safety and Health Act passes. 1977 Federal Mine Safety Act passes.

13 Milestones in the Safety Movement
1986 Superfund Amendments & Reauthorization Act passes. 1990 Amended Clean Air Act of 1970 passes. 1996 Total safety management (TSM) concept is introduced.

14 Milestones in the Safety Movement
2000 U.S. firms begin to pursue ISO registration for environmental safety management. 2003 Workplace terrorism is an ongoing concern of safety & health professionals. 2007 Safety of older people reentering the workplace becomes an issue.

15 Tragedies and Change Safety and health tragedies in the workplace have greatly accelerated the pace of the safety movement in the U.S. Three of the most significant were the Hawk’s nest, asbestos, and Bhopal tragedies.

16 Hawk’s Nest Tragedy The Great Depression was indirectly responsible for the attention given to an occupational disease that came to be known as silicosis. This was a disease that caused lung damage from breathing silica. Showed up on pre-employment physicals resulting from people changing jobs.

17 Hawk’s Nest Tragedy A company was given a contract to drill a passageway through a mountain in West Virginia. Workers spent as many as 10 hours a day breathing the dust created by the drilling and blasting. This mountain had an unusually high silica content.

18 Hawk’s Nest Tragedy Silicosis is a disease that normally takes 10 to 30 years to show up in exposed workers. At Hawk’s Nest, workers were dying in as little time as a year. By the time the project was completed, hundreds had died.

19 Asbestos Menace Once considered a miracle fiber.
In 1964, at a conference it was revealed that this material was killing workers. Was first linked to lung cancer and respiratory diseases. Was one of the most widely used materials in the U.S.

20 Asbestos Menace Found in homes, schools, offices, factories, ships and even in the filters of cigarettes. In the 1970’s and 1980’s, asbestos became a controlled material.

21 Bhopal Tragedy 1984 Union Carbide Chemical plant in Bhopal, India suffered a major plant failure. Over 40 tons of methyl isocyanate leaked out and killed more than 3,000 people. As many as 50,000 additional people were exposed to the poisonous gas

22 Bhopal Tragedy The company was accused of criminal negligence, corporate prejudice, and avoidance. Provided incentive for the passage of stricter safety legislation worldwide. In the U.S. led to the passage of the Emergency Planning & Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA)-1986

23 Role of Organized Labor
Worked to overturn anti-labor laws relating to the safety in the workplace. The fellow servant rule - held that employers were not liable for workplace injures that resulted from the negligence of other employees.

24 Role of Organized Labor
Contributory negligence - if the actions of employees contributed to their own injures, the employer was absolved of any liability. Assumption of risk - theory that people who accept a job assume the risks that go with it.

25 Accident Prevention Programs
There are many different types of accident prevention programs - simple to complex. Widely used accident prevention techniques include failure minimization, fail-safe designs, isolation, lockouts, screening, personal protective equipment, redundancy, and timed replacements.

26 Accident Prevention Programs
In the 1800’s employers had little concern for the safety of workers. Between WW I and WW II, industry discovered the connection between quality and safety. During WW II there were severe labor shortages.

27 Accident Prevention Programs
Employers could not afford to lose workers to accidents. This realization created a greater openness towards increasing worker safety. Improved engineering could prevent accidents. Employees were willing to learn and accept safety rules.

28 Accident Prevention Programs
Safety rules could be established and enforced. Financial savings from safety improvement could be reaped by savings in compensation and medical bills, Early safety programs were based on the three E’s of safety - engineering, education, and enforcement.


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