Lexikon

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workplace hazard groups

Mechanical hazards include:

By type of agent:

  • Impact force: collisions, falls from height
  • Struck by objects
  • Confined space
  • Slips and trips
  • Falling on a pointed object
  • Compressed air/high pressure fluids (such as cutting fluid)
  • Entanglement
  • Equipment-related injury

By type of damage:

  • Crushing
  • Cutting
  • Friction and abrasion
  • Shearing
  • Stabbing and puncture

Other physical hazards:

  • Noise
  • Vibration
  • Lighting
  • Barotrauma (hypobaric/hyperbaric pressure)
  • Ionizing radiation
  • Electricity
  • Asphyxiation
  • Cold stress (hypothermia)
  • Heat stress (hyperthermia)
  • Dehydration (due to sweating)

Biological hazards include:

  • Bacteria
  • Virus
  • Fungi
  • Mold
  • Blood-borne pathogens
  • Tuberculosis

Chemical hazards include:

  • Acids
  • Bases
  • Heavy metals
  • Lead
  • Solvents
  • Petroleum
  • Particulates
  • Asbestos and other fine dust/fibrous materials
  • Silica
  • Fumes (noxious gases/vapors)
  • Highly-reactive chemicals
  • Fire, conflagration and explosion hazards:
  • Explosion
  • Deflagration
  • Detonation
  • Conflagration

Psychosocial issues include:

  • Work-related stress, whose causal factors include excessive working time and overwork
  • Violence from outside the organisation
  • Bullying, which may include emotional and verbal abuse
  • Sexual harassment
  • Mobbing
  • Burnout
  • Exposure to unhealthy elements during meetings with business associates, e.g. tobacco, uncontrolled alcohol

Musculoskeletal disorders, avoided by the employment of good ergonomic design