HSE's 'Ladders Week' starts Monday
Falls from height are the number one cause of workplace deaths and one of the main causes of major injury in the workplace - and almost a third of falls are from ladders. Last year 13 people died from falls while working on a ladder, and over 1,200 people suffered major injuries. The Health & Safety Executive's (HSE) national initiative to promote the safe use of ladders, 'Ladders Week', which begins on Monday, will feature events where HSE inspectors will work with ladder users and their employers, look at the current use of ladders and suggest sensible measures to improve safety.
During Ladders Week, each HSE local office is organising its own events, many in partnership with trade associations, local employers and equipment hire companies. These events include Safety & Health Awareness Days, practical demonstrations of alternative equipment to ladders and breakfast meetings with employers and health and safety professionals.
To coincide with Ladders Week, HSE will be producing free guides to help raise awareness of the risks associated with ladder use and giving advice on how to use them safely.
Ian Greenwood, HSE Falls from Height Team Leader, said: "With a little more planning and assessment of the risks, understanding of the limitations of ladders, proper maintenance and checking that users are competent, many of these accidents could be avoided.
"A major injury, such as a broken bone or fractured skull, can often be a life changing event for the person concerned and their family. Quite apart from the personal suffering, an injury of this sort can adversely affect earning power and job prospects for a long time after the accident."
The key points to achieving increased ladder safety are:
Using risk assessment to establish what is the most suitable work equipment when people have to work at height, taking into account the conditions and type of work to be done.
Knowing the limitations of the ladder; employers should contact suppliers or manufacturers if they need more information.
Ensuring users are competent in the safe use of ladders, including any accessories.
Ensuring ladders are maintained in safe working order. Pre-use checks are critical as damaged ladders often continue to be used. In particular, missing ladder feet will increase the risk of a ladder slipping or stepladder wobbling.
A ladder should only be used where a risk assessment demonstrates that the task is low risk and of short duration, or where there are existing features on site that cannot be altered and the use of other equipment is not practical. Such features include restricted space preventing other equipment from being put in place correctly or ground conditions that mean that there is no suitable area to set up alternative equipment.
Further information to help people who work at height, employers, and others with responsibilities under the law, is available free on the HSE website at:
www.hse.gov.uk/falls/. The website includes a number of 'from experience' case studies of falls from ladders, together with advice on the precautions that should be taken to prevent such accidents.
Information about events during Ladders Week and contact details for more information are available on the HSE website. Alternatively, information is available from local HSE offices whose contact details are on the HSE website at:
www.hse.gov.uk/contact/maps/index.htm10.11.05