In accordance with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (OSHA) current National Emphasis Program authorization, OSHA will be selecting more than 70 at-risk employers for pre-planned inspections to occur in areas given a heat warning or advisory in high-risk industries including:
Besides these industries at the highest risk due to certain environmental conditions, below are other scenarios where OSHA can and likely will inspect for heat stress:
Now let’s discuss the best practices businesses can do to pass these inspections.
The secret to passing all inspections is knowing what the inspector is looking for.
With OSHA’S NEP, Certified Safety and Health Officers (CSHO)’s review and inspect a number of heat illness-related compliance procedures and documents.
The best ways to prepare are having and considering the following documents and questions:
Following the theme and essentialness of preparedness, companies have the resources and ability to mitigate heat illness before it happens.
A good resource to use is OSHA/NIOSH’s heat safety app.
This app is available on all iOS and Android devices and is an essential tool for heat measurement.
This app is a free and simple heat calculator that can provide them an index for the specific user’s location and workload guidance that follow occupational safety and health recommendations for hot conditions.
OSHA also recommends the use of an on-site wet bulb globe temperature to measure the impact of environmental heat on body temperature.
OSHA provides the example of the WBGT meter as it incorporates temperature, humidity, sunlight, and air movement into a single measurement.
Another essential part of preparedness is training and a proper heat illness prevention plan. Adequate training includes reminders and ongoing safety briefs.
Reminders can be formed from knowing the symptoms and moving quickly to reduce their effects.
This swift movement is the difference between the employee making it home from a shift and possibly experiencing a medical episode and suffering a serious injury at the jobsite.
Proper first aid for heat-related illness is to cool the affected worker.
Cooling techniques such as ice or cold towels on areas that produce the highest amount of sweat, being the head, neck, trunk, armpits, and groin, and immersing the worker in cold water or an ice bath are the best techniques.
Combining these techniques with cool air and staying with them until the symptoms decrease are proper first aid principles.
An additional way that employers can be prepared is by creating and consistently updating a heat-illness prevention plan. This written plan should include and provide answers to the following questions:
Collaborative efforts between supervisors and workers are key to passing inspections.
Workers and environmental safety should be of the highest priority as the number of heat-related facilities are larger than the 35 fatalities and 2,700 injury cases reported by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reports.
All employers should be and stay prepared for these inspections through proper research, monitoring, and implementation of safety plans for high-heat conditions.
Besides the National Emphasis program, OSHA and the Biden Administration have other free resources that can ensure policies regarding safety are addressed and properly followed.
Both high and low-risk industries should take advantage of these resources and work to combat the effects of the climate crisis on the worksite and the planet as a whole.
References
Safety and Health Administration. (n.d.). Retrieved August 18, 2022, from
https://www.osha.gov/heat-exposure/wbgt-calculator
2. What companies need to know about OSHA’s new heat illness rules. Occupational Health &
Safety. (2022, June 30). Retrieved August 18, 2022, from
https://ohsonline.com/articles/2022/06/30/what-companies-need.aspx
3. Williams, K. M. (2022, April 18). The heat is on: OSHA launches National Emphasis Programfor indoor and outdoor heat hazards: Foley & Lardner LLP. Blogs | Labor &
Employment Law Perspectives | Foley & Lardner LLP. Retrieved August 18, 2022, from