A Job Safety Analysis (JSA), also called a Job Hazard Analysis (JHA), is an effective safety risk identification and mitigation technique used to identify and mitigate the dangers of specific tasks in order to prevent the risk of injury to workers.
JSAs/JHAs identify step-by-step how a job or work task is completed. All of the steps are listed in sequential order and safety risks are identified and mitigated. JSAs/JHAs are a power tool in the arsenal to prevent workplace injuries and illnesses.
JSAs/JHAs are an integral part of a comprehensive safety program that helps reduce workplace injuries and illnesses and are very effective in engaging workers in the safety culture process.
The webinar will teach you Effective Techniques of Writing and Documenting Your JSAs/JHAs and answer any site-specific questions or concerns you might have.
Webinar Objectives
The main objective of this session is to make you more familiar with job hazard analysis. Upon completion of the session, you will be able to:
- Identify the Main Safety Purpose of Creating Job Safety Analysis (JSA)/Job Hazard Analysis (JHA)
- Understand How to Write an Effective JSA/JHA
- Understand How to Prioritize Job Tasks for JSA/JHA Creation.
- Understand How to Effectively Engage Employees in Creating and Implementing JSAs/JHAs
- Analyze Jobs Effectively to Detect and Correct Safety Hazards.
- Understand How JSAs/JHAs are a Key Part of Accident Investigations
- Answer Site-Specific Questions and Concerns.
Webinar Highlights
- What is a JSA/JHA?
- Who should conduct JSAs?
- Why is a JSA important?
- What jobs need a JSA?
- What are the benefits of doing a JSA?
- What are the basic steps on doing a JSA?
- What is important to know when "selecting the job"?
- How do I break the job into "basic steps"?
- How do I "identify potential hazards"?
- How do I "determine preventive measures?"
- How should I make the information available to everyone else?
Who Should Attend
Environmental Health and Safety Professionals, Loss Control Professionals, Insurance Professionals, Human Resource Professionals, General Managers, Plant Managers, Production Supervisors, Legal Professionals, Safety Committee Members, etc.