Top OSHA Violations Remind Employers of the Need for Continued Attention to Respirators
Mark Heuchert, MBA CSP
Indirect Channel Champion promoting Life Safety through our network of sales and service partners.
Selecting the right respirators for your employees is essential to keeping them protected, but how do you know what kind to choose?
Earlier in 2022, OSHA released data on the 10 most commonly cited violations for the prior fiscal year (October 1, 2020 to September 30, 2021). Topping its?list ?were fall prevention, respiratory protection, ladders and hazard communication. Despite the ongoing challenges of COVID-19, a virus that heightened the world’s mindfulness surrounding respiratory health, OSHA’s Respiratory Protection?Standard ?(29 CFR 1910.134)?remains a top industrial infringement.
Air pollutants and gases are common within industrial environments and many can be toxic. According to the EPA, toxic air pollutants include benzene, found in gasoline; perchloroethylene, emitted from some dry-cleaning processes; and methylene chloride, used as a solvent and paint stripper by a number of industries. Examples of other?air toxins ?include dioxin, asbestos, toluene, and metals such as cadmium, mercury, chromium and lead compounds.?With so many toxins in industrial workplaces, it is understandable that OSHA would issue guidelines to help protect workers from their potentially hazardous impacts.
Paragraph (a) of OSHA’s Respiratory Protection?Standard ?(29 CFR 1910.134) requires 1. the use of feasible engineering controls as the primary means to control air contaminants; and 2. employers to provide employees with respirators that are “applicable and suitable” for the purpose intended when “such equipment is necessary to protect the health of the employee.”
For employers, selecting the most “applicable and suitable” respirator for a specific application is not always obvious. That may explain why improper respiratory protection is repeatedly one of the top five most common OSHA?violations .?Some of the most?frequent mistakes ?involve atmospheric monitoring, not using the proper NIOSH-approved masks, medical evaluations and fit testing and training.
According to?29 CFR 1910.134 ?the employer?shall provide the following respirators for employee use in IDLH atmospheres:
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Employees shall be permitted to select a preferred respirator from various pre-approved models and sizes. Then, a fit test determines if the selected respirator is able to be positioned properly on the nose, cheeks and chin; provides room for eye protection; and allows the wearer to talk and breathe freely. Qualitative fit test?procedures ?examine an employee’s subjective sensory response—their taste and smell—to particular test agents, such as fragrant isoamyl acetate (banana oil), a sweet saccharin solution, Bitrix? (that causes a bitter taste), or an irritant smoke.?Quantitative fit testing uses a machine to measure the actual amount of leakage into the facepiece and does not rely upon the user’s sense of taste, smell, or irritation in order to detect leakage. The respirators used during this type of?fit testing ?will have a probe attached to the facepiece that will be connected to the machine by a hose.
OSHA shares its list of?top violations ?each year to remind companies of common workplace risks.?Still, year after year, properly establishing and managing an effective RPP proves to be a challenge for many companies. The COVID-19 virus certainly added to employers’ obligations and considerations related to selecting and sourcing appropriate respirators for workers.?Despite the changes and challenges, however, adhering to strict safety standards, which includes instituting appropriate respiratory protection practices, remains acutely necessary to protect the workforce. An effective RPP should focus on the hazards employees are exposed to everyday in conjunction with performing their job-related tasks so as to prevent workplace accidents.
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