Environment, Health & Safety in The Operating
Environment, Health & Safety in The Operating
Environment, Health & Safety in The Operating
SAFETY IN THE
OPERATING THEATRE
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
WHAT TYPE SECURITY INCIDENTS YOU SHOULD REPORT?
Any injury or potentially dangerous or threatening situations involving
Staff, Patients or Visitors (Aggressive persons, bomb threat, child
abduction, theft, lost and found items, suspected items like
weapons/illegal drugs
WHAT DO YOU DO IF YOU NOTICED SOMEONE SUSPICIOUS / IF
SOMEONE IN THE HOSPITAL BECOMES DISRUPTIVE
- a CODE BLACK should be reported to emergency hotline 7777 or notify
security (5555) from your nearest extension
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
HOSPITAL EMERGENCY CODES
RED Fire
BLUE Cardiac Arrest
YELLOW External Disaster
BLACK Aggressive Person
ORANGE Internal Disaster / Mass Casualties
WHITE ALL CLEAR
Glare
Brightness or luminance (difference between what is being
looked and its immediate environment)
Distance of the object to the eyes
Workers Vision or corrective lenses
SECTION 8: Exposure
controls/personal protection
CHEMICAL SPILLS
Any incident involving the spill/release of hazardous
chemicals, mixtures of such chemicals, or hazardous waste
that sometimes requires the intervention of spill cleanup
specialists to contain and remove the spilled material
safely.
MINOR SPILL
an event that can be handled safely without the assistance of
EHS or emergency response personnel.
WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF A MINOR SPILL?
Alert others in the immediate area.
Leave the immediate area without contaminating other individuals
and environments.
If clothing is contaminated, remove, folding contamination inward,
and treat as waste.
Refer to Safety Data Sheets (SDS) and appropriate cleanup guides
for chemical spills.
MAJOR SPILL
an event that cannot be handled safely without the assistance of EHS
or emergency response personnel, including all events where a person
is injured or contaminated.
WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF A MAJOR SPILL?
Before contacting the EHS / Emergency Response Personnel, be
prepared to answer the following questions:
BLOOD SPILL
Blood spills or other human body fluids that occur inside or in the
outside environment need to be decontaminated to prevent the
potential transmission of communicable disease.
The circumstances associated with blood spills can obviously vary
greatly depending on the volume and type of contact surface.
A small amount of blood, if splashed, can cover a large surface area. A
large volume, if undisturbed on a flat surface, can pool in a relatively
small area.
FIRE SAFETY