We are nothing after our death. Let us donate our body organs for the poor.

Be not afraid of anything. You will do marvelous work The moment you fear, you are nobody - Swamy Vivekananda

If you think safety is expensive, try an accident... - O.P.Kharbanda

Preventable accidents, if they are not prevented due to our negligence, it is nothing short of a murder - Dr. Sarvepalli Radha Krishna, 2nd President of India

Zero accidents through zero unsafe behaviors. Do not be complacent that there are no accidents. There may be near miss accidents (NMAs). With luck/chance, somebody escaped knowingly or unknown to the person. But, we can't be safe, if we depend upon the luck.

Safety culture is how the organization behaves when no one is watching.

We make No compromise with respect to Morality, Ethics, or Safety. If a design or work practice is perceived to be unsafe, we do not proceed until the issue is resolved. - Mission statement by S&B Engineers & Consultants Ltd. http://www.sbec.com/safety/

Human meat gets least priority - A doctor's comment on accidents

CSB video excerpts from Dr.Trevor Kletz, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQn5fL62KL8

Dec 1, 2008

Lab Safety

Safety is freedom the danger, risk, hazard, so is the meaning found in dictionaries. All of us are concerned about our wellbeing and of others, (mostly) known and (sometimes) unknown.

While doing an activity, consciously and / or unconsciously we keep assessing the dangers in that activity and we take appropriate measures for overcoming those dangers. However, to assess / know the hazards / dangers in a work, we should have knowledge about the nature of work, the materials to be handled both manually and mechanically, the work procedure, the skills required, the persons involved, etc. Apart from these, we also should know about the area at which the work is to be done, the surroundings, the layout, the type of help that will be available in case of emergency, the exit routes, the rules and regulations of the land, etc. So, it requires lot of information to carryout a work safely so that nobody will be exposed to the dangers before, during and after the work. We give lot of importance and attention on activities in plant operations, fabrication shops, workshops, transportation, etc.

However, little attention is paid to safety during various activities in laboratory. Laboratory is a place, where we do research on small scale to establish a process, analyse various materials to know the composition, etc. Laboratory plays an important role in the establishment and various chemicals are handled for which we may not know about the dangers in handling them. The dangers can be in the form of toxicity, fire or explosion. Similarly there are dangers due to electricity, which will be used for heating, mixing, ventilation, illumination, etc. Then, big laboratories will have associated workshops to meet their various requirements, because standard equipment may not be available in the market and therefore they have to be made to the requirement of the researcher or analyst. The dangers in workshop are due to material handling, electrical and from the machines like lathes, grinders, welding sets, cutting machines and cranes and hoists. When, we start thinking about safety in lab, slowly and progressively we start identifying hazards that are present in scaled up plants and we realize that we can’t ignore safety of the people working in laboratories.

This leads us to think big and draw up a safety plan for laboratory. So what is required?

1. A well planned layout for lab, with marked locations of rooms, equipment, office rooms, storage area, air handling units for supply and exhaust ventilation, transformers, power distribution boards (PDBs), emergency exits, fire extinguishers, first aid rooms, workshop, change rooms, etc.
2. Material safety data sheets (MSDS) of the chemicals to be handled, which are available in internet in web sites like www.ilo.org, etc or if not available consult with the supplier of the chemicals. MSDS gives information about physical and chemical properties, non-compatible reactions, transportation of chemicals, measures to be taken for safety during handling and in case of emergency, spillages, etc.
3. Types and quantities of various wastes generated, storage and handling and their disposal procedure.
4. Storage of chemicals at lab stores and in the lab.
5. Power distribution and their connections to the equipment, rooms, earthing connections of equipment, earth stations / pits, earth pit and grid resistance levels to be maintained, etc.
6. Location and routing of service systems like water, air, etc.
7. Off-gas exhaust system that includes piping / ducting, filters, scrubbers, exhaust fans, discharge location (so that exhaust does not become supply for other building’s ventilation system).
8. Drains, their routing, hazards in mixing of various drains to a common drain.
9. Availability of emergency power, water, ventilation for crucial equipment / rooms.
10.Gas cylinder bank storage, movement trolleys, piping / hoses including connection arrangement, pressure regulators, pressure relief valves, monitors / detectors, exhaust system for storage.
11.Mechanical material handling systems like hoists, cranes, pallet trucks, trolleys, safe working loads (SWL), etc.
12.Location of emergency showers and eye wash fountains, availability of water, their quality, maintenance.
13.Personal protective equipment (PPE) like nose masks, respirators, goggles, face shields, aprons, suits, hand gloves, shoes, helmets.
14.In Service Inspection (ISI) requirement for various equipment like furnaces, hoods, supply and exhaust system, PDBs, process and service piping, etc.
15.Maintenance and testing procedures for equipment, electrical systems, fire extinguishers, etc.
16.Minimum inventory of chemicals, essential spares for equipment, tools, etc.

The list goes on as one thinks of and this requires constant and continuous assessment of activities for hazards and based on the activities and hazards in it, appropriate corrective measures have to be taken to minimize the hazards to acceptable levels. Some of the corrective measures in the order of priority from first to last are,

Elimination – Stop use or preparation of chemical so that the hazard can be totally avoided.
Substitution – Find an alternate chemical or method by which the level of hazard can be reduced to acceptable levels.
Administrative – Devise and implement administrative controls so that safe handling can be ensured.
Training – Provide training and retraining to people so that they understand what they are doing, hazards in it and protective measures to be followed and what to do in case of any emergency.
PPE – Use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is the last line of defense and PPE as appropriate to the need is to be used correctly so that persons will be protected when all other lines of defense mechanisms fail.

Finally, an emergency plan should be available for meeting all possible situations, mock drills have to be conducted to ensure that every body understands what is their role and responsibility in an emergency and drawbacks found in mock drills are to be corrected so that a fool-proof emergency plan will be in place.

Finally, I want to remind all concerned about Murphy’s Law, which states, “If something can go wrong, it will and what is more, it will probably happen when we are least expecting it. It may also occur at the worst possible moment, when we are least able to react quickly and effectively because, we have our hands already full or our attention is elsewhere”.

And, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it - George Santayana”

For those who are interested in safety, a number of e-books are available at www.ebookee.com and www.esnips.com. Apart from these, accident investigation reports are available at www.csb.gov and www.hse.gov.uk.

Wish you all a safe lab experience.

Oct 30, 2008

Open borewells - fall of kids

Now a days, it is a regular phenomenon of reading / viewing the fall of innocent kids in open borewells. We also see, once a kid falls into a borewell, after it is brought into the attention by media, all agencies will come into action. For 8-10 inch borewell, a big well will be dug parallelly and a contact will be made to save the child. Proper closure of borewell, once dug, will cost a few hundred rupees. This responsibility should be squarely put on the person who digs it and after seeing so many incidents of fall of children into open borewells, it becomes necessary to even FENCE the closed borewell in a secured manner. If a borewell after drilling is not fitted with pumping arrangement immediately, then, it should not be taken up for drilling. Work should be completed in all respects and it is like playing with the lives of innocent children, IF the wells are not closed in a proper and secured manner. A lock and key arrangement should be made. If there is possibility of theft of lock, then, hand / motorised pump should be fitted immediately and the borewell should be put into use. Then only, I feel, we can avoid these recurring incidents of fall of children into thse wells.
Any person, who leaves the open borewells after drilling, should be put behind bars without bail. Then only people will realize the dangers posed by these open borewells.

Uneven floor - finger injury

A person was loading a gas cylinder on to the cylinder trolley, by rolling the cylinder in inclined position with one hand. While rolling the cylinder near the trolley, it slipped and fell on the hand. Before he could take off the hand, it fell and the person's finger came between the cylinder and the trolley. Though, the uneven surface was known to the people, not much attention was given for repairing it and this hazardous condition lead to finger injury. It is not possible always to predict what type injuries a hazard can cause. However, it is common sense to remove any hazard once it is idenfied.

If we don't respect the hazardous condition, then the hazard also will return the favour in the same manner. People spend more time and give justification for not attending the hazard rather than taking corrective action.

Apr 24, 2008

Tea distribution on stairs - a place for slips and falls

A friend of mine went to the fourth floor of a building for some work and while coming down, he decide to walkdown as he did not get the lift in time. When he approached first floor, he stepped on to a step down and the next thing he noticed was that he is on the floor with pain in the toe. All the packets in his hand were found lying here and there. He was taken to the hospital and a hairline crack was detected in his toe.

The reason for the fall is: spilled tea on the steps. Tea is sold to the needy at 1000 hrs and 1500 hrs. Tea drum will be kept on the first step of the floor and served to the customers. This proces also lead to spillage of some tea on the floor. After serving the tea, the person will take the tea drum back to his canteen without bothering to clean the spill.

A tea distribution point at one corner would have avoid the injury. The point is that even though the incident is known to those who take tea from the distributor, still they did not bother to find a suitable place for tea distribution. Today, they may not be victims, but the continuing situation will one-day cause these persons also to fall.

Mar 29, 2008

Borewells - Death traps

It is usual to read fall of children in the bore holes. The incidents repeat. Everybody expresses their sympathy, TV Channels cover live of the efforts by concerned authorities. They show frame by frame the sorrowful faces of parents and relatives of the victim. Then, after few days of the incident everybody forgets. Again the old footage comes in to open when a similar incident happens again. Special courts should be constituted to deliver immediate judgement to the persons who left the borewells open causing children to fall into them. Then only proper protective measures like barricading the area, providing cover with lock and key to the bore hole, etc will be taken. Though, fear works only when it is put into practice, however, such a situation may bring awareness to the persons responsible for digging borewells so that they will be rendered safe.

Road safety - during rains

The city is witnessing unusual rains now. The news bulletin in the TV says that monsoon showers are advanced by two weeks. We may hear shortly that a person fell into a open drain somewhere and was washed off. Last few years we are hearing this at one place or the other. Though the rain will be less, due to less seepage in to earth, all the rain water flows down along its graident downwards and there will be stagnated water where roads are uneven. We also do not learn from earlier incidents that were reported in news papers, TV, etc. We do same mistakes. We venture out into those pools and think that we are the most safety conscious among the lot on the road.

We go at great speeds on the road, take turns in the wrong direction, cause tense moments to others on the roads (they too cause the same). Some people normally go on left side but when it comes to a turning, they do the opposite. They take their vehicle to the extreme right (more so in blind turns) and find some one coming in the opposite direction (for him it is left). Due to water on the road, vehicles skid when brakes are applied (or brakes may also fail). Then, there are persons on the road who does not mind crossing without bother about speeding vehicles. Either the pedestrian will be hit or to save the pedestrian the rider will injure him self by applying brakes or will hit some body else on the road.

Let us remember the rains that caused havoc last year in Bengaluru and Mumbai. Persons in the cars thought they are safe and took cover in the cars. As the rain water on the road rose to dangerous levels they could not open the car doors and died of suffocation. In Hyderabad, two-three persons stepped into open drains in the water pool and were washed off.

Let us be prepared and also teach our children about road sense so that every body will be safe.

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