Eye
injuries at work are common. Every year about
70,000 workers injure their eyes. Luckily, 90
percent of all workplace eye injuries are preventable
with the use of proper safety eyewear.
The
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
provides regulations which employers and employees
must follow. OSHA reports that nearly three out
of every five workers injured were not wearing eye
protection at the time of their accident. The American
National Standards Institute (ANSI) provides these
standards of eye protection for any workplace task.
- Unprotected
workers will not knowingly be subjected to environmental
hazards.
- Protective
eyewear is required whenever there is a reasonable
probability eye injury may occur.
- Employers
must provide the type of eye protection best
suited to the task to be performed.
- Employees
are required to use the eye protectors provided.
The
Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that eye injuries
in the workplace cost over $467 million annually.
A written eye safety program should be implemented
in the workplace to help prevent workplace eye injuries.
Employers should consider these tips in developing
their safety plan:
- Determine
potential of eye injury for the tasks performed.
- Decide
how best to protect against the injury, e.g.,
dark lenses for welding, face-shield for flying
objects, tight seal for chemical spills, etc.
- Identify
the visual needs of the job, e.g., magnification,
dark lenses, etc.
- Post
rules requiring when and how eye protection
should be used.
- Provide
adequate supplies of eye protection and have
them readily available at the work site.
- Instruct
employees on appropriate treatment if injury
should occur.
- Require
vision screening for new employees to determine
any eye disease.
|