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Slips, Trips, and Falls A Roundtable Discussion

Slips, Trips, and Falls - The Source s/2015spring/slipstrips.p… · A Big Opportunity Slips, trips, and fall events are significant drivers of injury experience and claims costs

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Slips, Trips, and Falls

A Roundtable Discussion

The Roundtable

Gary Hatcher American Electric Power

Tim Walter First Energy Corporation

Gregg Slintak Consolidated Edison Co. of New York

Mark LaBaza Consumers Energy

YOU – PARTICIPATION MAKES FOR RICHER DISCUSSION

A Big Opportunity

Slips, trips, and fall events are significant drivers of injury experience and claims costs

Liberty Mutual’s analysis of 2012 data revealed that falls on same level and slip/trip events drove:

19% of workplace injuries

$11.36 billion in compensation claims costs

Accident Fund Insurance and United Heartland reported that slips on ice/snow drove nearly a third of Midwestern claims with lost time

The opportunity is universal – exposure is everywhere

PDCA Model

STFSS Summit Project

Video

High Level Data Analysis

Core group of SH Professionals and Project Leads conducted:

Individual review of the 1500 events

Identified and defined similar event categories

Narrowed the similarities into 8 Causation Clusters

Within the 8 Causation Clusters, further segregated each cluster into common themes

Individual Breakdown of the 1500 Events into the 8 Clusters

Result is a focused approach towards solutions

Seven (or is that 8?)-Clusters

Housekeeping

Surface Type

Task Demands

Equipment Failures

Body Mechanics

Hazard Recognition

Ascending/Descending

Complacency or Lack of Focus

Town Hall Meetings

78 facilitators trained

60 Town Halls conducted in less than a month across the system…

Asked Line Employees: How can we prevent slips, trips, falls, strains and sprains?

There were challenges…

Weather was not our friend

We found that we had been effective in teaching co-workers about complacency and accountability.

Next Steps

QUESTIONS?

Slip and Fall Mechanics

Measuring Slipperiness: Human

Locomotion and Surface Factors,

R. Grongvist, et al

Lockhart’s Intervention Concept

*Illustration depicts implementation by UPS

Consumers Energy Slippery Surface Training recap

Development - 2011

First Pilot completed:

Flint Michigan - January 2012

Today

9 units ( 7 stationary – 2 mobile)

Future

0 50 100 150 200

2011

2012

2013

2014

Total Slip Trip Fall (includes all slips, trips, falls on all levels)

Consumers Energy Total Slips, Trips, Falls on all levels

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

TOTAL SLIPS and FALLS (slips, falls on same level)

Minor slips & falls reported but not recordable (for slips, falls on same level)

Recordable slips and falls (on same level)

TOTAL FALLS (on same level)

Minor falls reported but not recordable (on same level)

Recordable falls (on same level)

2014

2013

2012

2011

2011 – 2014 Consumers Energy Data Comparison

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

2011 2012 2013 2014

Total Slip Trip Fall (includes all slips, trips, falls on all levels)

Recordable slips and falls (on same level)

Recordable falls (on same level)

OSHA Recordables

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

2011 2012 2013 2014

Total Slip Trip Fall (includes all slips, trips, falls on all levels)

Minor slips & falls reported but not recordable (for slips, falls on same level)

Recordable slips and falls (on same level)

Minor falls reported but not recordable (on same level)

Recordable falls (on same level)

“Minors” and Recordables

Variables?

Discussion on variables: • Weather (inches of snow, average temps) • How many employees • How many took the training • Hours on the road “walking”– employee hours • Other variables like footwear programs

QUESTIONS?

Existing Practices and Solutions:

Vehicle Entry/Exit

3-points, and No Leaps

Eyes and Salt Lead the Feet

Existing Practices and Solutions:

Traction Improvement

Thoughts?