Shed Some Light
Proper
lighting has been shown to reduce both accidents and ergonomic injuries.
Here's what the right light can do for your workers:
- Makes
hazards easier to see. Workers
are more likely to see obstructions and tripping hazards and to avoid
collisions and falls when light levels are adequate. In addition, in an
area such as a warehouse where bright light is not usually considered
necessary, better lighting can improve workers’ ability to perform tasks
like equipment inspections or reading labels, which can enhance safety.
- Improve
alertness. Studies have shown that
workers on third shift are more alert under bright lighting than dim—you
may need to provide more lighting for them than for workers on first or
second shift.
- Improve
security. Improved security
lighting can reduce the possibility of assault and reduce theft and
vandalism, which can lead to assault or injury.
- Reduce
eyestrain. For tasks requiring
attention to detail, bright lighting is a must. Without it, workers will
experience headaches, nausea, and other symptoms of eyestrain. The right
lighting for this type of task also takes glare into account; glare and
insufficient illumination both contribute to eyestrain.
Brighten Your Corner
Improving
lighting doesn’t have to be difficult. Some simple, low-cost ways to improve
lighting in your workplace include:
- Clean
your fixtures. The cost is negligible
and the benefits can be enormous. Just cleaning your light fixtures can
improve the light output from existing bulbs.
- Paint
the walls and ceiling. Light-colored
paint will reflect the light from your existing fixtures, improving
illumination. Consider whether a lighter color on machinery and work
surfaces could also improve overall visibility and illumination.
- Let
the sun shine in. Are
there windows in your workplace that have been painted over or walled
off? Open them back up! Consider replacing some of your roofing panels
with skylights. Natural light is one of the best lighting sources for
humans.
- Install
dimmers. After dark, bright
artificial light can help workers stay alert. To reduce artificial light
when natural light is available, and increase artificial light after the
sun goes down, consider installing dimmers or installing new light
fixtures exclusively for use by third-shift employees.
- Install
task lighting. Light
that would be too bright for comfort (and too expensive for the budget
if you tried to provide it everywhere) may be ideal if focused on a
small area, such as a worker’s desk. Arrange task lighting based on the
job being performed:
- Backlighting sets
an object off from the background.
- Overhead
lighting that hits an object at
an angle reveals detail and texture.
- Front lighting that
hits an object directly reveals detail, but can conceal texture.
- Reduce
shadows and glare. Blinds
or curtains enable workers to control glare from windows. Flexible arms
on task lights permit them to be moved so that they provide the best
light with the least glare. Matte paints in the workplace will allow
light to be reflected but will minimize glare.
Tomorrow,
we’ll look at another type of safety-related lighting: emergency lighting.
Inadequate Lighting Injuries
Inadequate lighting can present serious safety and health hazards to
someone visiting a private residence, business, or other public place.
Massachusetts law requires property owners and business owners to
provide an environment that as reasonably safe for people who are
lawfully on their premises. This includes conducting regular
inspections, make necessary repairs, and provide warnings about any
unsafe conditions like inadequate lighting.
Types of Inadequate Lighting
Inadequate lighting can occur in a wide variety of situations. A
power outage in a business like a store or other facility can result in
an injury from inadequate lighting because there are no emergency
lights, or a back-up generator is not available or used. Other examples
of inadequate lighting include:
- Light bulbs that are not properly maintained or are burned out
- Turning off or lowering the lights in a store or other facility
before all of the customers or people inside have had a chance to exit
the building
- Failure to install proper or adequate lighting where needed
- Failure to replace lights that have been damaged
- Failure to turn on house lights in a movie theater when patrons are entering or leaving
When the lighting is not adequate in an area, a person who is walking
or trying to navigate the area may be unable to see certain hazards
like potholes, broken stairs, a buckle in the sidewalk, or other
obstacles. Furthermore, they often cannot see where they are landing and
cannot see to grab anything to break their fall so they tend to fall very hard.
Injuries Caused by Inadequate Lighting
Injuries that are caused by inadequate lighting are typically
injuries from a “slip and fall.” They can be serious, resulting in time
lost from work, impact family life, and even impact a person’s quality
of life. The CDC reports that one out of five falls
results in broken bones, a head injury, or other type of serious
injury. More than 700,000 patients are hospitalized each year because of
injury due to a fall and 2.5 million older people are seen in the
emergency department because of fall injuries.
Types of injuries resulting from inadequate lighting can include:
- Neck, spine, and back injuries – includes broken back or neck,
slipped disk, pinched nerve, injury that causes chronic pain, requires
surgery, or causes disability.
- Torn ligaments and tendons – includes torn ligaments or tendons in
the wrists, knees, ankles, and feet that may require physical therapy,
surgery, permanent disability, and extended time off from work.
- Head injuries – includes traumatic brain injuries or brain damage
which may cause behavioral problems, cognition problems, memory
problems, and ongoing mobility issues and require extensive
rehabilitation or even surgery.
- Broken pelvis or broken hip – includes a fracture or break to the
hip or pelvis resulting in hip replacement surgery or prolonged stay in a
rehabilitative facility or nursing home.
Many victims of slip and fall accidents are senior citizens. The
elderly are more likely to fall and have an increased chance of
sustaining injury when they fall. When an older person is injured,
especially when a bone is broken, such as a hip or pelvis, it can be
devastating.
Legal Rights for Victims of Inadequate Lighting Injuries
If you have had an accident on someone else’s property due to inadequate lighting, you may be eligible for compensation. In a liability claim for inadequate lighting, you are required to show that:
- You were not trespassing; that you were on the property legally or
the owner knew you were on the property and you had their permission
- There was inadequate lighting and the owner should have known or did
have knowledge of it and either failed to provide satisfactory warning
or fix it.
- The injuries you sustained were the direct result of negligence on the part of the owner or other party in control.
|