Health and Safety Champions — June 2021 Focus
What's the biggest risk for injury in your department? Find out by using this tool to engage your co-workers in a rounding coversation about safety.
What's the biggest risk for injury in your department? Find out by using this tool to engage your co-workers in a rounding coversation about safety.
Help your teammates avoid slips, trips, and falls by encouraging them to identify and eliminate common hazards in their path of travel.
Do you toss and turn because you have trouble falling asleep? Help your co-workers make small changes to their sleep routines. Then huddle up and discuss what worked best.
Format:
PDF
Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
UBT health and safety champions
Best used:
Help your teammates understand the risks associated with slips, trips, and falls.
Slips, trips and falls are among the leading causes of injury to Kaiser Permanente workers. Take a safety walk to identify and reduce or eliminate potential hazards in your workplace.
This 24-page PowerPoint deck gives team leaders, trainers and facilitators a hands-on guide for teaching basics of workplace safety. It serves as a companion piece and is linked to the Workplace Safety Primer booklet on LMPartnership.org.
Format:
PDF
Size:
Seven pages, 8.5" x 11"
Intended audience:
Workplace safety co-leads, safety committee members, safety champions and frontline workers and supervisors
Best used:
This checklist of 31 potential hazards can help safety leaders and gardening/groundskeeping teams identify safety risks, propose solutions and resolve problems.
A hands-on checklist of 31 potential hazards garderners and groundskeepers may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.
A hands-on checklist of 22 potential hazards sterile processing staff may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.
What can your team do to prevent injuries?
A hands-on checklist of 31 potential hazards maintenance workers may encounter on the job—with advice on how to spot hazards, propose solutions and take steps to eliminate risks.
What can your team do to listen to the voice of the patient?