Ponting, Lucie | Features | Health and Safety at Work magazine
Published: 09.06.2008
By definition, emergency workers often face danger at work. But as they go about the daily business of saving lives and protecting people, they now face an extra set of risks in the form of attacks from the public. Lucie Ponting reports on initiatives to protect emergency workers from attack that show early signs of paying off.
Concorde crash: charges to be brought
Continental Airlines and five individuals face charges over the Concorde crash near Paris in which ...
Poor standards cost printer £44,000
Suffolk-based printers Clays must pay £44,000 in fines and costs after an HSE investigation ...
Two split £600,000 fine for Legionnaire's deaths
HP Bulmer and water treatment contractor Nalco have each been fined £300,000 for a Legionell ...
Scaffolder jailed for three months
The owner of a scaffolding firm has been sentenced to three months' imprisonment after one of his ...
Construction firm Amey Rail has been fined £20,000 over the death of track worker Jason Wilk ...
Published: 10.12.2008
We offer you the best guesses of some of the most senior figures in health and safety - including the ...
Published: 04.07.2008
Published: 04.07.2008
Published: 04.07.2008
Site specifics: slips, trips and falls
Published: 04.07.2008
Case study: And the winners are...
Wales' water utility literally prizes its contractors safety initiatives, as Sara Bean discovers.
Case study: Leeds Hospitals' burning issue
"The main thing about the new Order," observes Peter Aldridge, fire safety manager ...
Case study: Liverpool Council's ticket to drive
The corporate manslaughter legislation has put driver safety in the spotlight. Jocelyn Dorrell ...
If two heads are better than one, how much better are 14? David Gault would argue 14 work well when i ...
Case study: Safety by the book
While libraries may traditionally be slow-paced, managing safety at the British Library is anythin ...
Government responds to Select Committee report
The Government has published its response to the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) ...
Business Oscars to recognise SME wellbeing initiatives
This year's National Business Awards will feature a new category to recognise small firms that hav ...
There has been a small drop in workplace fatalities, although the average number has remained the ...
Health and safety curriculum call
The chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Occupational Safety and Health has called for he ...
The HSE has published its annual report, detailing progress against key targets, its financial pos ...
Question: Clinical Waste
What would be your advice regarding inoculations for operators who are involved with the maintenance of equipment being used to process clinical waste? The equipment in question is a lift that picks up clinical waste bins to deposit the waste into an autoclave and there may be a possibility the maintenance operatives could come into contact with 'sharps' etc.
Jun 18 2008 10:14AM
Geoff,
Not really my area of expertise, but this publication from t...
Recent Questions
I have been asked by a member of staff to confirm whether users of battery powered and key operated pallet trucks need to have formal training and a licence, similar to that needed to drive a fork lift truck. He claims that at a previous company that this was the case. Please help to clarify.
Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act
The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act introduces a new offence, across the UK, for ...
Control of Noise at Work Regulations
These regulations, which came into force generally in 2006, will apply to exposure to noise at work i ...
Smoke-free (Premises and Enforcement) Regulations 2006
www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2006/20063368.htm ...
Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007
www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2007/20070320.htm ...
Smoke-free (Exemptions and Vehicles) Regulations 2007
www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2007/20070765.htm ...










