Special Topics in Safety Management

Lifesaving Tips for Cold Weather Work


Yesterday we told you about a new safety standard designed to help assess risk and manage work in cold environments. Today we’ll look at more tips for keeping workers safe in cold workplaces—and at tool that makes sure you cover all of the bases.


Whether employees are working indoors or outdoors, they need to be aware of the hazards of exposure to heat and cold, how to guard against problems, and how to recognize the symptoms of distress. Individual tolerance to temperature extremes vary, but without adequate precautions, anyone can become ill, sometimes with serious—even fatal—results, from failure to recognize these hazards.


BLR’s Safety Management Checklists says that, as an employer, your responsibility is to see to it that normal working conditions do not put your employees’ health at risk. But from time to time, conditions are less than ideal—for example, doing outdoor emergency repair work in bad weather; working in confined spaces, high-heat areas; working in a food cold-storage area or freezer; and so on. If you cannot change the conditions, your next defense is to inform workers how to protect themselves from temperatures that can be uncomfortable or dangerous.


As with most safety and health training, the key points to bring out are hazard recognition, hazard protection, and procedures to follow in case of exposure.



Checklists keep airliners flying. They can keep your safety program up and running, too. See how with the award-winning Safety Audit Checklists program from BLR. Try it at no cost and no risk. Get the full story.



The points Safety Management Checklists recommends you cover include:


Prevent problems:


  • Limit exposure to cold, especially if weather is windy or humid.

  • Be especially careful if you’re elderly, overweight, have allergies, or poor circulation.

  • Be especially careful if you smoke, drink, or take medications.

  • Be aware that problems can arise even in above-freezing temperatures.

  • Be aware that problems can arise from touching a subfreezing object.

  • Don’t bathe, smoke, or drink alcohol before going into the cold.


Wear layers of loose, dry clothing:


  • Wear cotton or wool under layers.

  • Wear a waterproof top layer.

  • Be sure to cover head, hands, feet, and face.

  • Dry or change wet clothing immediately.

  • Keep moving in the cold.

  • Take regular breaks in heated areas.

  • Move to a warm area if you feel very cold or numb.

  • Drink a warm nonalcoholic, decaffeinated beverage.


Know symptoms of frostbite:


  • Feeling uncomfortably cold

  • Feeling numb

  • Feeling tingling, aching, or brief pain

  • Skin color changing from white to grayish yellow to reddish violet to black

  • Skin blisters

  • Unconsciousness


Act quickly if frostbite strikes:


  • Get medical attention.

  • Don’t rub body part or apply heat lamp or hot water bottles.

  • Don’t go near a hot stove.

  • Don’t break blisters.

  • Warm frozen body part quickly with sheets or blankets or warm (not hot) water.

  • Exercise warmed body part (don’t walk on feet, though).

  • Elevate frozen body part and cover with sterile cloths before moving.


Know symptoms of hypothermia:


  • Feeling cold

  • Pain in extremities

  • Shivering

  • Numbness and/or stiffness

  • Poor coordination

  • Drowsiness

  • Slow or irregular breathing or heart rate

  • Slurred speech

  • Cool skin

  • Puffy face

  • Disorientation

  • Apathy


Act quickly if hypothermia strikes:


  • Call for medical help.

  • Give victim artificial respiration, if needed.

  • Move victim into warm area.

  • Get victim out of frozen, wet, or tight clothing.

  • Bundle victim in warm clothes or blankets.

  • Have victim drink something warm (no caffeine or alcohol).



Examine the best-selling Safety Audit Checklists program for 30 days at no cost … not even for return shipping. Get the details



As regular readers of this column know, we are very high on the value of Safety Management Checklists. All told, this best-selling program provides you with more than 300 separate safety checklists, keyed to three main criteria:


  • OSHA compliance checklists, built right off the government standards in such key areas as HazCom, lockout/tagout, electrical safety, and many more.

  • “Plaintiff attorney” checklists, built around those non-OSHA issues that often attract lawsuits.

  • Safety management checklists that monitor the administrative procedures you need to have for topics such as OSHA 300 Log maintenance, training program scheduling and recordkeeping, and OSHA-required employee notifications.


Make as many copies as needed for all your supervisors and managers, and distribute. What’s more, the entire program is updated annually. And the cost averages only about $1 a checklist.


If this method of ensuring a safer, more OSHA-compliant workplace interests you, we’ll be happy to make Safety Audit Checklists available for a no-cost, no-obligation, 30-day evaluation in your office. Just let us know, and we’ll be pleased to arrange it.

Print

1 thought on “Lifesaving Tips for Cold Weather Work”

  1. you should not use cotton as an underlayer it will act as a sponge. you need to have a moisture wicking material like polypro or thermax as the innerlayer next to your skin. wool or fiber pile is a great second layer.

    also for hyperthermia treatment you could apply warm packs to the body at major points.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.