According to a safety report by Littelfuse, electrical workers who were trained on safety practices weren’t necessarily aware of how to avoid injury or death from electrical shock. The Chicago-based circuit protection manufacturer surveyed 575 electrical workers across an assortment of industries. Technicians, design and project engineers, maintenance electricians, electrical contractors, and safety, plant, and purchasing managers participated in the survey.
Over 90
percent of surveyed employees were provided with safety equipment training if
they work with or near equipment voltage up to 500 volts (V.) Most of the
workers (62 percent) who said they believe it is safe to work with 500V
experienced electrical shock by more than 220V while working.
“If a
worker cannot distinguish a safe working voltage from a hazardous condition,
then their safety training failed. It is also probable that any pertinent
safety practices the worker has retained are ineffective when they are unable
to read a hazardous situation,” Littelfuse wrote.
Many
electrical workers who went through electrical safety training use Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE), such as gloves, to work on live equipment. The
Littelfuse report stated, “If a worker believes they do not need to de-energize
equipment if they wear PPE, then their safety training has failed.” Moreover,
many facilities are required to send their electrical gloves to be tested by a
laboratory; many do not, according to surveyed employees.
Facilities
should be providing more than PPE to employees in order to prevent electrical
shock. According to the Littelfuse report, “PPE is the least-effective
preventative measure and responsible for many injuries and fatalities due to
its human-based practices. GFCI protection, which is a much more effective
preventative measure as it nearly eliminates the hazard, saves lives because it
does not require human involvement for it to work. Its out-of-sight-out-of-mind
practice requires zero energy from the workers to guarantee their safety.” Yet
the National Electric Code does not require GFCI protection for circumstances
as it does PPE.
For your electrical equipment and service
needs, contact J&P Electrical. We can answer questions about safety and
offer products to ensure your employees are protected. For further reading,
check out the report by Littelfuse.
J&P Electrical is a full-service electrical
equipment company. At J&P, we supply contractors, end-users, and supply
houses with new surplus, quality reconditioned, and obsolete electrical equipment.
We also purchase a wide range of electrical
equipment, such as bus plugs, ducts, panel switches, substations, and
transformers. Call us at 877-844-5514 or visit us at https://www.jpelectricalcompany.com.
Written by the
digital marketing staff at Creative Programs & Systems: www.cpsmi.com.
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