Amisco LLC - Online Training |
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This material is for training
purposes only. Its purpose is to inform Amisco LLC clients of best
practices in occupational safety and health and general OSHA
compliance requirements. This material is not a substitute for any
provision of Federal or State OSHA requirements. |
Module Seven: Program
Evaluation |
walk around
inspection procedures. Do they assess for violence prevention
measures?
Review the employee survey process. Is it producing valid, reliable
date?
Review staff meetings/safety
committee meetings to determine if they address violence prevention
issues.
Review workplace violence
reporting procedures.
Track the process of reporting
problems and making engineering and administrative control measures.
Review the violence prevention
program education and training process.
It's also a good idea to include
local law enforcement representatives, legal staff, Oregon OSHA, insurer,
or private consultants and/or other expert third-party experts to evaluate
program processes and procedures.
Important policies, plans,
reports and records to analyze
- Review the written violence
prevention plan.
- Violence prevention program
policies. Policies should be informative and directive.
- Log of injuries and illnesses
(OSHA 200 Log) to identify trends in workplace violence-related injuries
relative to "baseline" rates.
- Safety inspection
reports.
- Medical reports of worker
injury.
- Incidents of assault and
threats of violence.
- Post incident response
reports.
- Information on high-risk
clients with a history of past violence.
- Minutes of safety
meetings.
- Job hazard analyses.
- Records of relevant training
conducted, attendees and qualification of trainers.
Evaluate the program after an
incident
After an incident occurs, it is
especially important to evaluate the workplace violence prevention program
and assess its effectiveness. Deficiencies should be identified and
corrective action taken. It's crucial to know what risks existed prior to
a threat or incident so that the evaluation team can determine what
additional security measures, if any, should he put in place after a
threat or violent incident.
- If warranted, provide
increased worksite protection when serious threats of violence have been
made, such as requesting additional police patrols, hiring security
guards, and/or alerting organizations or people who might be affected.
- Consider the costs and
benefits of providing increased protection to threatened employees, such
as changing their phone numbers, relocation, loaning them a cellular
phone, or providing them with a quick response distress button or
information about where this device can be obtained.
- Counsel potential victims
about various civil and criminal options available to them, such as
obtaining a restraining order.
Well, there you have it. I hope
you have enjoyed this course on developing a violence prevention program.
I want to encourage you to participate in other Internet courses and the
more traditional workshops. Click
the lighthouse logo below to link to a portal with more planning
resources. 
Amisco LLC
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