OSHA Guidance: 19 Best Practices for Employee Slips, Trips and Falls

Wet floors or spills and clutter can lead to employee slips, trips, falls and other possible injuries. OSHA offers the following 19 solutions and good work practices to eliminate the likelihood of these occurring in your facility.

 

Possible solutions


1. Keep floors clean and dry. In addition to being a slip hazard, continually wet surfaces promote the growth of mold, fungi and bacteria that can cause infections.

 

2. Provide warning signs for wet floor areas.

 

3. Where wet processes are used, maintain drainage and provide false floors, platforms, mats, or other dry standing places where practicable, or provide appropriate waterproof footgear.

 

4. Walking/Working Surfaces Standard requires: Keep all places of employment clean and orderly and in a sanitary condition.

 

5. Keep aisles and passageways clear and in good repair, with no obstruction across or in aisles that could create a hazard. Provide floor plugs for equipment, so power cords need not run across pathways.

 

6. Keep exits free from obstruction. Access to exits must remain clear of obstructions at all times.

 

Other recommended good work practices

 

7. Ensure spills are reported and cleaned up immediately.

 

8. Use no-skid waxes and surfaces coated with grit to create non-slip surfaces in slippery areas such as toilet and shower areas.

 

9. Use waterproof footgear to decrease slip/fall hazards.

 

10. Use only properly maintained ladders to reach items. Do not use stools, chairs, or boxes as substitutes for ladders.

 

11. Re-lay or stretch carpets that bulge or have become bunched to prevent tripping hazards.

 

12. Aisles and passageways should be sufficiently wide for easy movement and should be kept clear at all times. Temporary electrical cords that cross aisles should be taped or anchored to the floor.

 

13. Eliminate cluttered or obstructed work areas.

 

14. Nurses station countertops or medication carts should be free of sharp, square corners.

 

15. Use prudent housekeeping procedures such as cleaning only one side of a passageway at a time, and provide good lighting for all halls and stairwells, to help reduce accidents.

 

16. Provide adequate lighting especially during night hours. You can use flashlights or low-level lighting when entering patient rooms.

 

17. Instruct workers to use the handrail on stairs, to avoid undue speed, and to maintain an unobstructed view of the stairs ahead of them even if that means requesting help to manage a bulky load.

 

18. Eliminate uneven floor surfaces.

 

19. Promote safe work in cramped working spaces. Avoid awkward positions, and use equipment that makes lifts less awkward.

 

Source: OSHA

 

Read more about OSHA:

 

- OSHA Budget Targeted for Significant Cuts by Congressional Republicans

 

- OSHA Guidance: 9 Best Practices and Guidelines for Contaminated Laundry Exposure Prevention

 

- OSHA Guidance: 6 Practices for an Equipment Hazards Prevention Program

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