Your journey to a safe workplace starts with a single step – and this helpful guide.
In this summary you will learn
- What workplace safety is
- Why workplace safety is important
- How to design and implement a workplace safety program at your small or medium-sized company
getAbstract rating
| getAbstract rating |
Applicability |
|
Innovation |
|
Style |
|
| Level of Expertise |
Why you should read Workplace Safety
Many workplaces seem quite safe. There are no open mine-shafts to fall into, no baths of sulfuric acid to spill, no explosives lying about ready to be ignited. And yet, according to professional safety consultants Dan Hopwood and Steve Thompson, every workplace needs a detailed, current and well-documented program to protect the health and safety of employees. While the hazards have changed, the risk of injury remains. Rather than spiraling down a mine-shaft, a worker might get a repetitive stress injury. Rather than spilling acid in the doughnuts, a worker might pull a muscle lifting a heavy box. Rather than dropping a cigarette onto some dynamite, a worker might inhale an irritant that causes a chronic lung condition. In each case, the results can include missed work, disrupted lives, insurance claims that increase your premiums and fines for regulatory violations. This brief book will help you avoid all that, whether you are just starting your safety program or re-engineering it. Many checklists and useful appendices nicely complement the text. getAbstract feels safe recommending this sensible guide.
About the Authors
Dan Hopwood is a risk management executive. Steve Thompson is a consultant.
Do you like this summary?
Ähnliche Zusammenfassungen
-
Surviving and Thriving in Uncertainty
Creating the Risk Intelligent Enterpriseby Frederick Funston and Stephen Wagner
-
The CEO's Boss
by William M. Klepper
-
Fair Pay, Fair Play
by Robin A. Ferracone
-
How to Measure Anything
by Douglas W. Hubbard



