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| Reprinted
from the February 2002 issue of Occupational Hazards Magazine. Copyright
2002 by Penton Media Inc. All rights reserved. |
Too many workers
who wear eye protection still suffer injuries. Here's help on how to
determine when more protection is needed.
Most safety professionals
agree that workplace eye injuries are preventable. Yet, OSHA estimates
that 1,000 eye injuries occur every day in U.S. workplaces, at an annual
cost of $300 million in lost production time, medical expenses and workers'
compensation.
OSHA lists two
major reasons for eye injuries at work: not wearing eye protection or
wearing the wrong kind of protection for the job.
A Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) survey of workers who suffered eye injuries revealed
that nearly three out of five were not wearing eye protection at the
time of the accident. These workers most often reported that they believed
protection was not required for the situation.
About 40 percent
of the injured workers surveyed by BLS were wearing some form of protective
eyewear when the accident occurred. More than 90 percent of the injuries
to workers wearing protection resulted from objects or chemicals going
around or under the protector.
Hazard Assessment
Because workers
who wear protective eyewear still suffer injuries, how much protection
is enough? To answer that question, begin with a hazard assessment to
determine which of several eye hazards exist for each job:
- Dust, concrete,
metal and other particles;
- Chemicals such
as acids, bases, fuels, solvents, lime and wet or dry cement powder;
- Falling or shifting
debris, building materials and glass;
- Smoke and noxious
or poisonous gases;
- Welding light
and electrical arcs;
- Thermal hazards
and fires; and
- Bloodborne pathogens
(hepatitis or HIV) from blood, body fluids and human remains.
Phil Johnson, vice
president of research, development and quality assurance for Bacou-Dalloz's
Uvex, advises against relying on a call to a manufacturer to determine
what type of protective eyewear will work for a specific situation. An
onsite hazard assessment is necessary, Johnson says.
When Metal Seal
& Products in Willoughby, Ohio, did a hazard assessment in 1999,
it noted eye hazards for every job and the type of protection needed.
The company's 200 workers now have a better understanding of when eye
protection is required and what type of protector to wear, says Dale
Diemer, the precision machining company's purchasing manager who also
is in charge of safety.
For example, in
the machining area, workers know to wear safety glasses for impact protection.
In the plating area, however, exposure to chemicals and liquids calls
for more side protection with goggles and, in some cases, face shields.
A hazard assessment
at Oberfield's, a Delaware, Ohio, a maker of concrete structural and
architectural blocks, parking blocks, precast steps, lintels and landscape
products, turned up varying degrees of eye hazards. Dan Hodge, OHST,
the human resources/safety specialist, determined that the most hazardous
job was cleaning mixers, hoppers and mold parts. The workers are exposed
to flying particles when they use air chisels to chip off hardened concrete.
The assessment
took 1 1/2 years, during which time Oberfield's used trial and error
and employee input to come up with the best eye protection for each
situation, says Hodge, industrial eye safety chairman for Prevent Blindness
Ohio and a national member of the eye safety advisory committee for
Prevent Blindness America. Now, even less hazardous jobs require eye
protection. An example is fleet maintenance, especially when working
under vehicles.
Types of Protection
To ensure that
workers wear the proper type of protective eyewear, the following list
from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health provides
a starting point:
Safety glasses.
Safety glasses with side protection provide minimum protection and are
for general working conditions where there may be minor dust, chips
or flying particles. Side protection includes side shields and wraparound-style
safety glasses.
Safety glasses
should have an anti-fog treatment. Polycarbonate lenses are lightweight
and provide the best impact protection, but generally are not as scratch-resistant
as glass unless treated with a hard coating.
OSHA's eye and
face protection standard, 29 CFR 1910.133, requires that eye and face
protection be American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Z87.1-certified.
Look for the ANSI Z87.1 mark on the lens or frame.
Goggles.
Goggles provide higher impact, dust and chemical splash protection than
safety glasses. Goggles for splash or fine dust protection should have
indirect venting. Use direct-vented goggles for less fogging when working
with large particles. Safety goggles designed after ski-type goggles
with high air flow minimize fogging while providing better particle
and splash protection than glasses.
Uvex's Johnson
says safety glass users should graduate to goggles when there is more
than occasional particle hazards, such as when cutting wood. The assessment,
in many cases, comes down to the severity of the hazard.
At Oberfield's,
which has 135 employees in six locations, Hodge determined safety glasses
were not enough protection for workers who clean mixers and hoppers.
They tried goggles, but even anti-fog products occasionally fogged up.
With face shields, chips still would get under the shield. The solution
was chipper's goggles, which look like large swimmer's goggles and cup
around the eye to seal out particles and dust.
Hybrid safety
glasses or goggles. Safety glasses with foam or rubber around the
lenses provide better protection from dust and flying particles than
conventional safety glasses. Wraparound safety glasses that convert
to goggles with a soft plastic or rubber face seal may offer better
peripheral vision than conventional goggles. Johnson cautions, however,
to avoid hybrids or wraparounds when more impact protection is needed
than safety glasses provide. In those cases, use goggles.
Prescription
safety glasses. Workers who wear nonsafety prescription glasses
should wear tight-fitting goggles over the glasses. Because contact
lenses may present a significant corneal abrasion risk when working
in dusty areas, contact lens wearers should wear unvented goggles.
Wear goggles over
prescription safety glasses in high-dust environments. If worn alone,
prescription safety glasses should have side protection.
Prescription safety
lenses with tempered glass or acrylic plastic lenses are not suitable
for high impact. Do not use these types of safety glasses when working
in debris areas unless covered by goggles or a face shield. Use polycarbonate
lenses when working in high-impact areas.
Face shields.
When protecting the eyes, don't forget to guard against injuries to
the face. For highest impact protection, face shields protect the full
face from spraying, chipping, grinding and critical chemicals or bloodborne
hazards.
Never wear face
shields, which provide secondary protection, without primary eye protection
(safety glasses or goggles). Wear safety glasses or goggles under face
shields to provide protection when the shield is lifted, Johnson says.
Primary protection helps prevent particles that get under the shield
from lodging in the eyes.
Specialty protection.
Use other types of protection, such as filtered helmets or goggles,
for tasks such as welding or working with lasers. Lenses for welding
light protection must be marked with an appropriate "shade number"
for the task. Remember to protect the eyes even when the helmet is lifted.
Welder's helpers, other workers and bystanders should have welding light
protection when near torch cutting or welding. Use ANSI Z136-certified
eye protection for laser light hazards.
While full-face
respirators provide the best general dust, chemical and smoke protection,
they will not necessarily be Z87.1-compliant for impact protection,
nor seal properly over glasses. Use prescription inserts compatible
with a respirator. Respirators should be professionally fitted.
Ensure a Proper
Fit
One way to make
sure that safety glasses provide adequate protection is for them to
fit properly, according to Winston Wolfe, president of Olympic Optical.
Safety glasses
should rest firmly on top of the nose and close to, but not against,
the face, Wolfe says. The nose piece should not slide down the face
due to sweat or moisture. "If the glass slides down even a small
amount, the user will lose some protection," he adds.
Wolfe suggests
that safety glasses have a three-point fit, meaning the frame should
touch the face in three places - at the nose bridge and behind each
ear. Temples should wrap around the head, with slight pressure behind
the ear, not above the ear.
Protective eyewear
works best when employees know how to use it properly. Employers should
ensure proper training for employees. Combined with machine guards,
screened or divided work stations, and other engineering controls, using
the correct protective eyewear can help keep workers safe from any type
of eye hazard.
Eye Injury Statistics
- Of 72,268 facial
injuries resulting in lost workdays in the United States in 1999,
53,096 were eye injuries.
- Of the 53,096
eye injuries, the two most common types of injuries were chemical
burns (5,659) and cuts or punctures (4,303).
- The top three
eye injury sources were chemicals and chemical products (7,907), hand
tools (4,215) and parts and materials (4,097).
Source: Bureau of
Labor Statistics
Don't Forget
To:
- Brush, shake
or vacuum dust and debris from hard hats, hair, the forehead or the
top of the eye protection before removing the protector.
- Avoid rubbing
eyes with dirty hands or clothing.
- Clean eyewear
regularly and ensure the protector is in good condition.
- Ensure eye protection
fits properly and will stay in place.
Source: NIOSH
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