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Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... | 30000010069642 | HD7261 O93 2004 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
In all workplaces the health and safety of employees is closely linked with the company's profitability. Human resource strategies for improving the health and safety of people in the workplace do not necessarily cost money - in fact they usually save money.
A practical book based on the authors' combined consultancy experience, Increasing Productivity and Profit Through Health and Safety shows readers how they can use ergonomics to make money for their organizations. Richly illustrated with a range of case studies drawn from heavy industry, retail sales, hospitals, hotels, and call centers, the book outlines universal concepts that can be used in any workplace. Included with the book is a CD-ROM that contains a simple but sophisticated working cost-benefit analysis model. This model enables readers to input their own data, which will help them make the case for implementing workplace health, safety, and ergonomics programs. For the non-expert there is a chapter that explains economics concepts and models using 'non-economics' language.
Human resource personnel, physicians, safety and risk management specialists, trainers, and ergonomists as well as business managers and engineers will find this book to be a powerful support tool for developing and implementing workplace improvements.
Author Notes
Dr Oxenburgh is presently ensconced as Emeritus Research Scholar at the National Institute for Working Life (Sweden) continuing his work on developing methods for measuring worker safety and productivity. He is a Fellow of the Ergonomics Society of Australia
Pepe Marlow: Since 1997 Pepe has worked as a consultant specialising in short-term projects in the occupational health, safety and injury fields
Andrew Oxenburgh is a Bachelor of Applied Science in Computing Science from the University of Technology, Sydney
Table of Contents
About the authors | p. vi |
Foreword | p. viii |
Acknowledgements | p. x |
1 Introduction | p. 1 |
2 Economics for the non-economist | p. 8 |
3 Information sources | p. 39 |
4 The Productivity Assessment Tool | p. 52 |
5 Case studies | p. 69 |
5A Industrial cleaning: safer at a lower cost | p. 74 |
5B Permanent or precarious employment? The hospitality industry | p. 84 |
5C Why lift patients when there's a better way? Reducing back injuries in the health industry | p. 92 |
5D Large-scale experiments: valuable but not easy to carry out | p. 99 |
5E Manual handling | p. 109 |
5F Personal protective clothing and equipment | p. 122 |
5G Prevention and rehabilitation | p. 132 |
6 New supervisory systems | p. 140 |
7 Ethics | p. 163 |
8 Installing and running the Productivity Assessment Tool | p. 176 |
Glossary | p. 178 |
Index | p. 185 |
productAbilityBasic: CD-ROM of the software for the Productivity Assessment Tool |