google-site-verification=Bi5tI8WZLmgLQCt3p-aIw8z5CkJAHeD9rrURuZtohHM Safety In Waste Collection Occupations - Human Factors Minute

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Safety In Waste Collection Occupations

Safety is a large concern in waste collection as it has a higher than average fatal injury rate when compared to industry.

Waste collection work is associated with a variety of physical, chemical, and biological hazards. 

Some studies and reports suggest that fatal injuries when exposed to these hazards are more than doubling when considering door-to-door waste collection occupations. 

Waste collectors are required to perform tasks that involve Frequent lifting of heavy loads, high repetitive tasks, long work durations and insufficient recovery times. 


These are seen are significant risk factors that may result in chronic injuries and diseases.


Human factors plays an important role in improving safety for workers by implementing several human factors principles when considering the design of products, processes, and procedures. 


Some of these include:

Training operators on proper lifting techniques

Increasing frequency of collection to reduce overall weight of containers

suggesting rotation of staffing to reduce fatigue in single individuals 

and ergonomic improvements of the collection bins and trucks to be easier to maneuver or use by operators


These are just some of the ways in which Human Factors can contribute to ensure minimal waste makes it to the ocean


To donate to #teamseas or to find out more about the #teamseas campaign, visit teamseas.org


Guest hosted by Matteo Vinci


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Transcript

Safety is a large concern in waste collection as it has a higher than average fatal injury rate when compared to industry.

Waste collection work is associated with a variety of physical, chemical, and biological hazards.

Some studies and reports suggest that fatal injuries when exposed to these hazards are more than doubling when considering door-to-door waste collection occupations.

Waste collectors are required to perform tasks that involve Frequent lifting of heavy loads, high repetitive tasks, long work durations and insufficient recovery times.

These are seen are significant risk factors that may result in chronic injuries and diseases.

Human factors plays an important role in improving safety for workers by implementing several human factors principles when considering the design of products, processes, and procedures.

Some of these include:

Training operators on proper lifting techniques

Increasing frequency of collection to reduce overall weight of containers

suggesting rotation of staffing to reduce fatigue in single individuals

and ergonomic improvements of the collection bins and trucks to be easier to maneuver or use by operators

These are just some of the ways in which Human Factors can contribute to ensure minimal waste makes it to the ocean

To donate to #teamseas or to find out more about the #teamseas campaign, visit teamseas.org

This has been another Human Factors Minute!

About the Podcast

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Human Factors Minute
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About your host

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Nick Roome

Nick is currently a Senior UX Researcher at Turvo in the Pacific Northwest, focused on developing innovative solutions and optimizing human performance for SaaS based supply chain logistics programs. Alongside colleague and friends, Blake Arnsdorff and Barry Kirby, Nick hosts and produces Human Factors Cast, a weekly podcast that investigates the sciences of human factors, psychology, engineering, biomechanics, industrial design, physiology and anthropometry and how it affects our interaction with technology. Nick’s other areas of interest include, but are not limited to virtual, augmented, and mixed reality, systems engineering, and artificially intelligent systems.

Nick Started Human Factors Cast in early 2016 as a side-project. He believed that the way Human Factors concepts were being communicated is broken and saw a way to fix it. After getting initial traction, Nick moved to work on the Human Factors Cast Digital Media Lab and began assembling a multi-disciplinary team to test out new concepts in Human Factors communication.