Eye Protection: Going Beyond the Regulations
Go beyond the rules and focus on how safety is viewed in your workplace.
- By Derick Plowden
- Apr 01, 2022
Imagine not seeing family or enjoying special moments with friends and loved ones. That’s the reality of many employees who lose their eyesight due to workplace injuries. According to OSHA, thousands of employees are blinded each year due to workplace eye injuries.
If employees injure their face or eyes, there’s a chance they can cause serious damage and suffer for the rest of their lives. One crucial step you can take to protect employees is communicating the importance of safety in a meaningful way. Go beyond the rules and focus on how safety is viewed in your workplace.
Your Safety Culture
What’s the safety culture like in your workplace? Employees may be more inclined to wear their eye protection depending on your safety culture. While it may be easier to be the safety police, employees may respond better to a safety culture that expresses appreciation for hard work and rewards safety. The goal is to get employees to wear their eye protection because they want to, not because they have to.
When it comes to eye protection, employees may choose not to wear it because it doesn’t fit well, or it could be that they forget to. In any case, you need to be proactive about tackling the issue without disciplining employees. For example, have employees sit down and write letters to their closest friends and family. Instruct them to write what they’d say to a family member if they were severely injured on the job.
Of course, employees shouldn’t provide the letter to their loved ones. Instead, have them express how they felt during the exercise. The end result: employees will hopefully feel more inclined to use their eye protection.
Here are a few more tips to help you improve eye protection safety in your workplace:
Reinforcement works. A supervisor who stops work to immediately correct hazardous conditions or practices (like not wearing eye protection) should help demonstrate the importance of safety to the workers. However, positive reinforcement by recognizing safe practices is equally important.
Stop bad habits right away. A bad habit will likely become more common if left unaddressed, increasing the odds that an employee gets hurt. If you notice employees not wearing eye protection or skipping other safe work procedures, take immediate corrective action.
Positive feedback. While corrections may be necessary, you do not want all interactions to be negative. Occasionally stop to compliment workers on how well they are following safe procedures. Delivering positive feedback also has a strong influence on promoting desired behaviors.
This article originally appeared in the April 2022 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.