Asked by Charlie kirk jr.
example of hazard
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Do you mean a hazard in the workplace, at home, a natural hazard, or something else? Here are brief examples across common categories — each with a typical control measure:
- Physical: wet floor causing slips and falls — control: clean spills promptly, put up warning signs, use non-slip mats.
- Chemical: bleach fumes irritating lungs — control: use ventilation, proper storage, PPE (gloves, eye protection).
- Biological: needlestick exposing a worker to bloodborne pathogens — control: use safety needles, sharps containers, vaccination, training.
- Ergonomic: repetitive typing causing wrist strain (carpal tunnel) — control: adjustable workstation, regular breaks, ergonomic keyboard.
- Electrical: exposed live wiring causing shock — control: de-energize and lockout/tagout, insulating covers, regular inspections.
- Fire: overloaded power strip starting a fire — control: avoid daisy-chaining, follow load limits, have extinguishers and alarms.
- Psychosocial: workplace bullying leading to stress and mental health issues — control: anti-bullying policy, reporting procedures, employee support.
- Natural: flood damaging property and disrupting operations — control: elevated storage, flood barriers, emergency plan and insurance.
- Radiation: unshielded X-ray exposure — control: shielding, exposure monitoring, training and limiting time.
If you tell me the setting (e.g., construction site, laboratory, office, home), I can give targeted examples and controls.
- Physical: wet floor causing slips and falls — control: clean spills promptly, put up warning signs, use non-slip mats.
- Chemical: bleach fumes irritating lungs — control: use ventilation, proper storage, PPE (gloves, eye protection).
- Biological: needlestick exposing a worker to bloodborne pathogens — control: use safety needles, sharps containers, vaccination, training.
- Ergonomic: repetitive typing causing wrist strain (carpal tunnel) — control: adjustable workstation, regular breaks, ergonomic keyboard.
- Electrical: exposed live wiring causing shock — control: de-energize and lockout/tagout, insulating covers, regular inspections.
- Fire: overloaded power strip starting a fire — control: avoid daisy-chaining, follow load limits, have extinguishers and alarms.
- Psychosocial: workplace bullying leading to stress and mental health issues — control: anti-bullying policy, reporting procedures, employee support.
- Natural: flood damaging property and disrupting operations — control: elevated storage, flood barriers, emergency plan and insurance.
- Radiation: unshielded X-ray exposure — control: shielding, exposure monitoring, training and limiting time.
If you tell me the setting (e.g., construction site, laboratory, office, home), I can give targeted examples and controls.
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