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WEDNESDAY, April 27, 2011: VOLUME 2, ISSUE 17
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In this issue:
5 Ways to Honor Those Who Died on the Job
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Night Shift Workers Frequently Struggle to Stay Awake
Feature Story
5 Ways to Honor Those Who Died on the Job
Every year, approximately 5,000 American workers and 1,000 Canadian workers die in work-related incidents. On April 28, the International Day of Mourning – which is also known as Workers’ Memorial Day – we pay our respects to our fellow workers who were injured or killed on the job.

Tragedy in Numbers

In the US, an average of 16 workers die each day from injuries received at work, and 134 are estimated to die from work-related diseases. And approximately 9,000 American workers are treated in emergency wards each day because of occupational injuries.

In Canada, approximately three workers die on the job every day and more than 900,000 workplace injuries are reported every year.

Raising Awareness Worldwide

The International Day of Mourning is set aside not only to commemorate the dead, ill and injured, but also to raise awareness of the importance of occupational health and safety and its role in preventing these needless tragedies. More than 85 countries worldwide recognize this important day.

What Can You Do?

“Mourn for the dead, fight for the living” is the theme of the day. Here are 5 ways you can do that:

1. Be a safety mentor to a new worker.

2. Find the lesson to be learned from a workplace injury or fatality you’ve heard about.

3. Hold a candlelight vigil to remember workers who died.

4. Take 5 minutes to to listen to Stacy Smallwood’s OHS performance poetry, a beautiful tribute to those who died on the job.

5. No matter what part of North America you’re in, dedicate a flower to a fallen worker on the WorkSafeBC memorial website. As you watch the flower fall, take a moment of silence to honor a friend, family member or colleague.

Mentoring is an effective way to use what could be your company's greatest untapped resource – your experienced employees – to train new workers. Mentoring can be used as a stand-alone program, or with an existing workplace health and safety strategy, to reduce accidents and injuries, cut claims and produce a more safety conscious workforce. SafetySmart offers some tips on how you can mentor your company to safety success.

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This scaffold obviously isn’t on the up and up, putting a different slant on safety for anyone foolish enough to use it. (WorksafeVictoria, Australia)
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Safety News
Night Shift Workers Frequently Struggle to Stay Awake
Reading about air traffic controllers not being available to assist pilots because they are asleep sounds like big news, but a sleep expert says night shift workers across a range of careers fall asleep on the job all the time.

Dr. Charles Czeisler, chief of sleep medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, MA, says studies have shown that as many as 50 percent of night-shift workers report falling asleep on the job at least once per week.

Czeisler says while only two percent of people slept six hours or less daily 50 years ago, 28 percent of people do so now.

He says permitting night shift workers to nap would allow workers to be more alert and effective, but the practice is frowned upon in many workplaces.

“We pretend that these things are not happening, instead of managing the problem. We have a bury-our-head-in-the-sand attitude,” says Czeisler.
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