Register | Login | Set as Home Page | Bookmark | General Enquiries | Help | Tuesday, 02nd of December 2008
Health & Safety Matters
 hsmsearch.com
Search 
Magazine 
Register for our ENewsletter


What next?
 Request further Information    visit web site     Send to friend
 NICEIC company's profile
Click to visit sponsors web site

Click to visit sponsors web site

A question of standards
February 1st 2008

The recently updated internationally recognised standard OHSAS 18001:2007 brings health and safety certification in line with other key areas of business certification such as the environment ISO14001 and quality ISO9001 - making it easier for companies to implement an integrated management system, explains Keith Stanton of NQA

For many firms, particularly smaller ones, health and safety legislation can seem like a major hurdle to jump, but with OHSAS 18001:2007, legislative compliance can be managed in a logical and organised manner.

The updated standard means it is now more straightforward than ever, for companies to introduce a manageable health and safety system and, through independent third party UKAS accredited certification body, demonstrate that they take health and safety matters seriously.

The first Health and Safety statute to be passed was the Health and Morals of Apprentices Act 1802. This sought to combat the dreadful conditions experienced by child apprentices within the cotton industry. As well as limiting the number of hours worked, it specified minimum standards for lighting, heating and ventilation.

Compliance was regulated by visitors appointed to factories by local magistrates.

The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 enabled, for the first time, broad general health and safety duties to be placed upon all workplaces, and allowed for the introduction of more general specific codes of practice.

In the late 1990s, OHSAS 18001:1999 was developed in response to a demand for a recognisable occupational health and safety management system standard against which a company's compliance could be assessed and certified.

The updated standard supersedes OHSAS 18001:1999 and brings health and safety certification in line with other key areas of business certification such as the environment ISO14001 and quality ISO9001 - making it easier for companies to implement an integrated management system.

There are many benefits to attaining the new updated standard, OHSAS 18001:2007.

As well as helping to prevent accidents and fatalities, certification to OHSAS 18001:2007 may reduce insurance premiums and protect firms from compensation claims, something that is increasingly necessary in today's blame culture. In addition, NQA's clients have found that being certified to OHSAS 18001 helps their standing both in the community in which they work and within their industry helping to attract both employees and new business prospects.

Recognising health and safety at all levels One of the key benefits of the new standard is that it encourages participation not only from all of a firm's employees, but also self employed workers and contractors.

OHSAS 18001:2007 states that everyone in the workplace must take responsibility for all aspects of health and safety that they have control over.

So health and safety is no longer just the remit of the health and safety manager or senior management.

Accountability is moved down the chain of command, ensuring health and safety is of primary importance at all levels of a company's structure. The standard also requires that the health and safety policy be communicated to everyone in an organisation – so even those people who don't have direct responsibility are aware of the regulations.

One of the first firms to make the switch to the updated standard is NQA client, Farrans Construction, a building and civil engineering contractor with 450 employees, based in Belfast. Alex Anderson, Farrans' Safety Health Environment and Quality Manager, comments: "Everyone has a responsibility to work safely and prevent injury to themselves and others. One way we can all achieve this is to have an effective health and safety management system.

"OHSAS 18001:2007 has assisted Farrans in the development of an effective safety management system.

Amongst other things, it provides a major focus on issues such as accident prevention, and provides reassurance to clients that health and safety is being managed in a professional manner and that there is a system in place to achieve continuous improvement in this vital area." Palletline provides vital distribution links for customers across the UK and employs 100 people at its Birmingham HQ. It has recently implemented OHSAS 18001:2007 through NQA. Kevin Buchanan, managing director of Palletline comments: "Working towards certification to OHSAS 18001:2007 has enabled us to promote an intrinsically safe working environment, operating within a clearly defined framework where we identify and control risks to health and safety.

The initiative matches closely with our existing drive to consistently reduce the potential for accidents and improve our performance across the board." The Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 will come into effect on 6 April 2008. Under this new act, companies and organisations can be found liable for a work-related death if actions at a senior level amount to gross breach of a duty of care to the deceased following a systemic failure to manage safety within the business.

So now more than ever could be time for leaders of all businesses, to consider implementing OHSAS 18001:2007.

More articles from NICEIC: