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Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

1 of 18

PowerPoint presentation

Harmful substances

Unit 130: Handle and store tiling materials and accessories

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

2 of 18

Introduction The learning outcomes of this presentation will be:

• the legislation associated with harmful substances

• the risk classifications

• methods of controlling the risk associated with harmful substances.

Source: HSE.com

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

3 of 18

Harmful substances

• A harmful substance is any material/substance with the potential to cause illness or injury to people who come into contact with it.

• A substance may be hazardous because it is explosive, flammable, harmful, irritant, corrosive, toxic, produces a chemical reaction or an allergic reaction.

Source: ToolStation.com

Source: HSE.com

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

4 of 18

Harmful substances

In the UK every year:

•2.2 million people suffer work-related ill health

•6,000 die as a result of work-related cancer

•500 die from other work-related diseases

•39 million working days are lost.

The estimated cost of the above is £4–£6 billion.

Figures from HSE

Source: HSE.com

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

5 of 18

Harmful effects Acute and chronic effects include: •Cancer •Asthma •Lung disease •Skin disease – dermatitis •Burns •Irritation – skin, eyes, lungs •Sensitisation •Infectious diseases – hepatitis •Neurological damage – lead, mercury •Birth defects •Impaired fertility

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

6 of 18

Legislation

The Health and Safety at Work Act 1974

The Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations 1999

The Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations 2002

The Chemicals (Hazard Information & Packaging for Supply) Regulations 2002 (CHIPS)

Source: Shutterstock

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

7 of 18

The Health & Safety at Work Act 1974 “It shall be the duty of every employer to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare of all employees.”

• Safe plant and systems of work

• Safe use, handling, transport, storage of substances and articles

• Provision of information, instruction and training

• Safe place of work including access and egress

• Safe working environment with adequate welfare facilities

• A written safety policy if more than four employees

Further duties extend this requirement to include non-employees who may still be affected by the work undertaken.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

8 of 18

The COSHH Regulations 2002

Designed to protect employees and others from the effects of harmful substances.

Provides more specific guidance than the general arrangements.

Outlines an eight-step approach to managing harmful substances in the workplace.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

9 of 18

The CHIPS Regulations 2002

CHIP requires the supplier of a dangerous chemical to:

•Identify the hazards (dangers) of the chemical. This is known as ‘classification’.

•Give information about the hazards to their customers. Suppliers usually provide this information on the package itself (e.g. a label) and, if supplied for use at work, in a material safety data sheet (MSDS).

•Package the chemical safely.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

10 of 18

Chemical hazard symbols

Oxidising agent

Radioactive

Biohazard

Explosive

Toxic

Flammable

Corrosive

Harmful

Harmful to the environment

Source: HSE.com; (biohazard) United Nations

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

11 of 18

Form of the substance

Solid – Liquid – Gas

Dust – The term used for small particles of a solid suspended in the air.

Vapour – The term used to describe the gaseous state of solids or liquids.

Fumes – Formed when solid vapours condense in the atmosphere.

Mists – Small liquid droplets that form when a liquid is atomised.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

12 of 18

Changes of physical form

• Solid to dust, e.g. asbestos and hardwood dust

• Liquid to vapour, e.g. petrol

• Solid to fumes, e.g. lead oxide, chlorine gas

• Liquid to mist, e.g. paint spray, pesticides

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

13 of 18

Routes of entry into the body

Inhalation

Ingestion – food/drink

Absorption – skin/cuts

Injection

Source: Shutterstock

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

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Prevent or control exposure Hierarchy of controls:

•Eliminate

•Substitute

•Isolate

•Reduce exposure – engineering controls

•Reduce exposure – procedural controls

•Personal Protective Equipment

•Welfare facilities

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

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Reduce exposure – procedural controls

• Reduce numbers exposed to the hazard.

• Reduce duration of exposure.

• Prohibit eating/drinking/smoking.

• Provide welfare facilities.

• Ensure good personal hygiene.

• Ensure safe storage of harmful substances.

• Ensure safe systems of work for routine and non-routine activities.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

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Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

• Use as a last resort if only control measure.

• The hazard remains unaffected.

• Its effectiveness relies on correct use.

• Only the wearer is protected.

• Effectiveness may be reduced over time.

• Supplied, maintained, cleaned, stored and replaced free of charge.

• May require specialist fit testing etc.

• May require specialist disposal.

• Can be uncomfortable to wear.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

17 of 18

Golden rules for safety

• Always check labels before use.

• Only store in suitable and labelled containers.

• Store chemicals in a secure area.

• Never mix chemicals without appropriate advice and guidance.

• Always wear appropriate PPE correctly.

• Clear up spillages immediately.

• Follow safe systems of work practices.

• Report any symptoms of ill health immediately.

• Report any operational or equipment failures.

Level 1 Diploma in Wall and Floor Tiling

© 2013 City and Guilds of London Institute. All rights reserved.

18 of 18

Any questions?