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WEDNESDAY, February 23, 2011: VOLUME 2, ISSUE 8
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In this issue:
Why Work On Wellness?
New OHS Insider – Yours Free for 7 days!
Picture This
Should Injuries to Non-Workers Be Treated the Same as Injuries to Workers?
First UK Company Convicted of Corporate Manslaughter
Feature Story
Why Work On Wellness?
Every advantage counts in today’s economic climate, and this includes having healthy employees able to put in a good day’s work. Wellness programs that help workers maintain a healthy weight can cut company losses related to sick days and lowered productivity. Studies on obesity from Statistics Canada suggest that overweight young men are nearly four times more likely to be absent from work than those of healthy weight. Obese women aged 35-64 were significantly more likely to take disability days compared to their co-workers within the healthy weight range. The study highlights the personal stress and long-term health problems that can be caused from being overweight, and the “significant societal costs by reducing labor market productivity.”

In the United States, obesity is estimated to cost a company of 1,000 employees an average of $285,000 a year in obesity-related healthcare and worker sick days. Medical costs for obese employees are 77 per cent higher than for healthy weight employees. Obese employees have the highest prevalence of work limitations, with 6.9 per cent experiencing such limitations compared to three per cent among normal weight-range employees. Duke University researchers found that the heaviest workers had 13 times more lost workdays because of work-related injuries, and their medical claims for those injuries were seven times higher than their fit co-workers. Top 10 Ways to Prevent Exercise Injury

If you’re encouraging your workers to exercise for fitness, you need to remind them to do so safely. Here are 10 rules for staying injury-free on a fitness program:
  1. Always do warm ups and stretching.
  2. Do exercises in a controlled manner.
  3. If lifting, start out using light weights.
  4. Don’t go to total muscle fatigue in your first few weeks.
  5. Practice and perfect your technique.
  6. Remember to breathe.
  7. Keep vertebrae properly aligned.
  8. Strengthen abdominal muscles; they support your lower back.
  9. Bend, don’t lock the knees.
  10. Include cooling-down time.
Use these exercise safety tips in your company newsletter, on bulletin boards, in payroll stuffers and safety meeting handouts. The Safety Smart! Wellness section has hundreds of images, puzzles, posters, audio and text resources you can use to build your corporate wellness program.

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Sponsored Focus
New OHS Insider – Yours Free for 7 days!

We’ve introduced a redesigned version of OHS Insider with great improvements in features and functionality. Sign up today for a No-Cost 7-day Trial of OHS Insider and:

Sign up today for a No-Cost 7-day Trial of OHS Insider. Plus, you will be entered into a drawing for a $50 Tim’s gift card.
Offer expires 2/25/11
Picture This
Picture This
The ladder in this photograph comes up more than a little short. We don’t even know what this guy is supposed to be doing on the side of this building, but it sure doesn’t appear safe from any angle. (WorkSafeVictoria, Australia)
See Picture Here:
Safety Compliance
Should Injuries to Non-Workers Be Treated the Same as Injuries to Workers?
The primary goal of the OHS laws is to ensure the health and safety of workers. But employers’ duties don’t end with their staff; employers are also required by the OHS and other laws, such as occupier liability laws, to protect visitors to their workplaces.

Read more on this subject at OHSInsider.com.

(note: subscription is required; to get instant access, simply sign up for a No-Cost Trial of OHSInsider.com. Sign up now and you will be entered into a drawing to win a $50 Tim’s gift card.)
Safety News
First UK Company Convicted of Corporate Manslaughter
A geotechnical company in England has become the first company in the United Kingdom to be convicted of corporate manslaughter.

Cotswold Geotechnical (Holdings) Ltd. was fined the equivalent of $622,000 US ($612,000 CAD) in Winchester Crown Court in connection with the death of 27-year-old geologist Alexander Wright in a trench collapse incident in September 2008.

A Winchester Crown Court jury found the company guilty of failing to ensure Wright’s safety. He was working alone in a 12.6-foot (3.8-meter) deep unsupported pit when it caved in on him at a worksite in Gloucestershire.

The UK’s Corporate Manslaughter Act came into force in April 2008.
Read the story here:
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