HSE performance leading indicators & HSE performance lagging indicators
HSE
PERFORMANCE INDICATOR
HSE
performance leading indicators & HSE performance lagging indicators
HSE performance leading indicators
·
Leadership HSE Site Walk down
·
Training
·
Preventive maintenance program
·
Hazard identification and assessment
·
HSE inspections
·
HSE Meetings (internal & subcontractors)
·
Timely close out of actions from Observations and
Non-conformances
·
Safe work man hours
Safe man hours: recorded as
the man hours in which work activities are performed without any lost time
injury;
HSE performance lagging indicators
·
Fatal incidents (FAT)
·
Lost Time Incidents (LTI)
·
Restrict Workday Cases (RWC)
·
Medical Treatment Case (MTC)
·
Total Recordable Incident Frequency Rate (LTIFR)
·
First Aid Cases (FAC)
·
Near miss incidents (including high potential near misses)
·
Occupational illnesses
·
Unsafe acts
·
Road Traffic Accidents (RTA)
·
Traveling to/from work
·
Property loss events
·
Environment pollution incidents
Near miss incidents (including
high potential near misses): ("near hit", "close call", or
"nearly a collision") is an unplanned event that has the potential to
cause, but does not result in human injury, environmental or equipment damage,
or an interruption to normal operation.
First Aid Case (FAC): means
one-time treatments, and any follow-up visit for observation of minor
scratches, cuts, burns, splinters, or another minor industrial injury, which do
not ordinarily require medical care;
Medical Treatment Case (MTC):
is defined as an injury or disease that resulted in a certain level of
treatment (not first-aid treatment) given by a physician, or other medical
personnel under standing orders of a physician. The following injuries shall be
recorded as MTC:
·
Therapeutic (physiotherapy or chiropractic) treatment, more
than once;
·
Stitches, sutures (including butterfly adhesive dressing instead
of sutures);
·
Removal of dead tissue or skin (surgical debridement);
·
Treatment of infection;
·
Application of antiseptic during a second or subsequent visit
to medical personnel;
·
Removal of foreign objects embedded in an eye;
·
Removal of foreign objects embedded in a wound (not small
splinters);
·
Removal of embedded objects from an eye;
·
Treatment of deep tissue (second or third-degree) burns;
·
Use of hot or cold soaking therapy or heat therapy during the
second or subsequent visit to medical personnel;
·
Positive X-ray diagnosis of fractures, broken bones, etc. or
·
Admission to the hospital or equivalent medical facility for
treatment.
Lost Time Injury (LTI): refers
to the accidents that result in a disability or an employee missing work due to
an injury. Employees who return to work after sustaining an injury may also be
counted as a Restricted Work Injury if they are unable to completely perform
their job duties. Only injuries deemed to be work-related shall count as a Lost
Time Injury. Accidents that happen off the clock or site that affect an employee’s
ability to work shall not be counted as LTI.
The
formula for LTIR is as follows:
Occupational Fatality: An
occupational fatality is a death that occurs while a person is at work or
performing work-related tasks.
Property Loss Event: Property
Loss Event means any loss of or damage to property of any Note Party that
results in the receipt by such Person of proceeds of insurance or any taking of
property of any Note Party that results in the receipt by such Person of
compensation payment in respect thereof.
Total Recordable Incident
Frequency Rate (LTIFR) looks at the number of total recordable incidents and
compares it to the number of total hours worked by all employees in a single
year. A recordable incident is any work-related injury and illness that result
in death, loss of consciousness, days away from work, restricted work activity,
transfer to another job, or medical treatment beyond first aid.
The
formula for TRIFR is as follows:
TRIFR = (LTI+MTI+RWI) x 200,000
Hours worked
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