Imminent Danger: Characterizing Uncertainty in Critically Hazardous Mining Situations (238a5f11-bb83-4363-b417-acdf4143fa33)

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
B. M. Eiter J. Hrica D. R. Willmer
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
87 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2018

Abstract

"Mineworkers are routinely tasked with making critically important decisions about whether or not a hazard presents an imminent danger. Researchers from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) collected formative data to investigate mine safety professional perspectives on workplace examinations, which revealed a potential gap in how mineworkers are assessing risk. During interviews, participants indicated having processes in place for what should be done once an imminent danger situation is identified. Critically, however, they report having no systematic methodology for mineworkers to use to determine if a hazard is considered imminent danger. While this is important for all imminent danger situations (e.g., failure to lockout/tagout), it is especially important for those situations that are not immediately recognizable as imminent danger. In this paper, we identify and describe, three distinct categories of imminent danger complexity and discuss potential steps that could lead to improved identification of imminent danger situations. Finally, we identify potential practices to incorporate into risk management efforts, including feedback, communication, and specialized training to increase awareness of imminent danger situations. INTRODUCTION In recent years, the metal and nonmetal (M/NM) mining sector, as categorized by MSHA, experienced an increase in the number of fatalities occurring at mine sites. From 2013 to 2015, 69 mineworkers were fatally injured; that is twice the number of fatalities that occurred in each of the previous two years (MSHA, 2015a). As a way to address this increase, the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) issued a program policy letter (P15-IV-01) suggesting that “miners would benefit from rigorous workplace examinations conducted by experienced and trained examiners (MSHA 2015b).” The goal of workplace examinations is to find hazards in the field and mitigate them before they cause injury or death to mineworkers. While it is important to identify all hazards in the workplace, it is critically important to identify those hazards that are considered imminent danger because they require an immediate response to avoid a severe or even fatal injury."
Citation

APA: B. M. Eiter J. Hrica D. R. Willmer  (2018)  Imminent Danger: Characterizing Uncertainty in Critically Hazardous Mining Situations (238a5f11-bb83-4363-b417-acdf4143fa33)

MLA: B. M. Eiter J. Hrica D. R. Willmer Imminent Danger: Characterizing Uncertainty in Critically Hazardous Mining Situations (238a5f11-bb83-4363-b417-acdf4143fa33). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2018.

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