New OSHA Regulations for COVID-19 | HR Certification Online
Prepare
for New OSHA Regulations for COVID-19
Wed, September 02,
2020 01:00 PM – 02:30 PM EDT 90 Minutes Credits HRCI 1.5 & SHRM 1.5 PDCs
Speaker:Bill Levinson, P.E.,
FASQ, is the owner of Levinson Productivity Systems PC
Areas will be covered
1.
Planning principles
- Create
a risk register of locations and/or activities that could expose workers
and other stakeholders to COVID-19.
- Involve
workers and other interested parties in the planning process. They are
often in the best position to identify potential contagion sources.
- Consider
two primary hazards: contagion from a cough, and contagion from surfaces.
Countermeasures against a cough will work against contagion from ordinary
respiration but not necessarily the other way around.
2. Hierarchy of controls: eliminate the hazard, reduce the
hazard, engineering controls, administrative controls, and personal protective
equipment (PPE)
3. Eliminate the hazard: working from home, distance education,
and remote conferencing make contagion impossible as COVID-19
cannot travel on the Internet. Organizations have already found that these
measures they have been forced to take have saved a lot of money on physical
space along with commuting costs, and may make them permanent.
4. Reduce the hazard, e.g. with drive-up banking rather than
in-office banking.
5. Engineering controls do not rely on vigilance or compliance
to protect people.
- Distance
(between respiratory tracts) is our friend, and the more, the better.
Distance can be added without the need for more floor space through the
use of partitions.
- Air
handling systems, and ultraviolet air disinfection systems, can suppress
contagion as well. ASHRAE offers substantial guidance on this.
6.
Administrative controls rely on vigilance and compliance.
- Staggered
shifts reduce the number of people present at any given time.
- Hand
hygiene and surface hygiene address the issue of surface-borne contagion.
- Telling
people to maintain 6 feet between them, on the other hand, requires the
use of technology (such as proximity alarms as reminders) to be truly
effective.
7. PPE is a last line of defense but it can be extremely
effective.
- If
a job requires respiratory protection as defined by OSHA, then
NIOSH-approved respirators are mandatory, along with a respiratory
protection program. Ordinary or even surgical face masks will not do. The
good news however is that most jobs defined as medium risk, i.e. most jobs
outside health care, will not require this level of protection per
"Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for COVID-19"
- Respirators
nonetheless offer the best protection when worn regardless of job
requirements, assuming they are available. The UK's Health and Safety
Executive (their counterpart of OSHA) found that the best respirator
reduces the risk of getting COVID-19 by a factor of 100. The kinds not
used by health care workers do seem available on an at least sporadic
basis. Placement of a cloth mask over the exhaust valve can meanwhile
offer some protection to others if the wearer has the disease and is
asymptomatic.
- The
UK's Health and Safety Executive found that surgical masks reduce the risk
of getting COVID-19 by a factor of about 6. These masks are known
quantities when they meet ASTM requirements. A major issue is that, unlike
respirators, they do not seal completely around the nose and mouth but
this can be improved with mask tighteners and mask sealers.
- Improvised
masks are not as good but they are still better than none at all.
- All
masks and respirators must be worn and handled properly and, if reusable,
disinfected properly between uses.
- Beware
of counterfeit PPE, especially respirators that claim N95 or better
capability.
- Consider
safety goggles or face shields to protect against contagion through the
eyes, although this is not believed to be a principal contagion source.
Attendees will receive a pdf copy of the presentation slides and
the accompanying notes, as well as another handout on face masks and
respirators. Disclaimer; no part of this presentation constitutes formal
engineering or occupational health and safety advice. Attendees are encouraged
to consult the material from OSHA, ASHRAE, and the other sources that will be
cited in the presentation.
Overview
The HEROES (Health and Economic Recovery Omnibus Emergency
Solutions Act) which passed the House of Representatives in May, will require
OSHA to develop regulations for workplace protection from COVID-19. This
webinar will help workplaces get a head start on these requirements with
off-the-shelf solutions that are already being used and, more importantly,
protect workers and other stakeholders while ensuring continuity of operations.
Why Should You Attend
The United States has unfortunately made the same mistakes it
made in 1918, when a respite in the flu pandemic caused people to lower their
guard by abandoning precautions including social distancing and use of face
masks. COVID-19 has made a devastating comeback, at the estimated cost of 1000
lives per day, that threatens a fragile economic recovery along with
businesses' continuity of operations.
Safe restoration of economic activity requires nonpharmaceutical
interventions (NPIs) including but not limited to social distancing, engineering
controls, and appropriate respiratory protection. "Wait for a
vaccine" is not an option because it might not be ready until 2021, and
viruses can mutate into forms that can defeat existing vaccines. This is why
new flu vaccines are needed every year.
The pending legislation will require OSHA to issue a standard or
regulation with which workplaces will then need to comply, but the standard
should be welcomed enthusiastically. Workplaces do not, however, have to wait
for a formal standard because OSHA’s "Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for
COVID-19" already offers a good preview as to what to expect, and other
off-the-shelf protective actions are widely available as well. This webinar
will provide a comprehensive overview of countermeasures against COVID-19 along
with links to authoritative resources.
Key Learning Objectives
1. The HEROES Act will require OSHA to develop a standard for
protection from occupational exposure to COVID-19 and related diseases. Safe
resumption of economic activity, and continuity of operations, depend on
workplace protection regardless of whether a standard is forthcoming.
2. Basic planning principles for workplace protection including
risk registers and workforce participation in the planning activities
3. Hierarchy of controls: eliminate the hazard, substitute less
hazardous conditions, engineering controls, administrative controls, and
personal protective equipment (PPE)
4. Use telecommuting, distance education, and remote
conferencing to not just eliminate the hazard, but also save money.
5. Use engineering controls such as partitions and air handling
systems to reduce workplace exposure.
6. Administrative controls may require technical aids to be
effective as they rely on vigilance and compliance.
7. PPE is a last line of defense but it is very effective if
used properly.
Who will Benefit
Everyone
with responsibility for reopening businesses in the aftermath of the COVID-19
outbreak, as well as people with responsibility for occupational health and
safety (OH&S) compliance along with building layouts and heating,
ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC).
This activity has been approved for 1.5 HR
(General) recertification credit hours toward aPHR, PHR, PHRca, SPHR, GPHR,
PHRi and SPHRi recertification through HR Certification Institute (HRCI).
Please make note of the activity ID number on your recertification application
form. For more information about certification or recertification, please visit
the HR Certification Institute website at www.hrci.org
This program is valid for 1.5 PDCs for the
SHRM-CP® or SHRM-SCP®

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