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Description

Risk Assessments Can Save Lives
Risk assessments can save lives, hazards can cause life-threatening accidents and health conditions.
For example, fire hazards put many people’s lives at risk , exposure to dangerous substances can cause long-term and potentially fatal health conditions and dangerous work equipment such as heavy machinery can also take lives if not used correctly.
By identifying these hazards, and implementing the control measures to eliminate or reduce their effects, risk assessments can save lives.
Risk Assessments Are Legal Requirement
Risk assessments are a legal requirement. All companies and self-employed people are required to consider health and safety risks in the workplace.
Risk Assessments Prevent Business Financial Loss
If employees are affected by work-related injuries or ill-health, they will need to take time off and companies may need to cover sick-pay and the cost of employment cover, there may also be legal fees and affected parties may claim compensation..
Carrying out a thorough risk assessment and taking steps to reduce the assessed risks can prevent accidents and ill-health and the costs that come with them.
This course provides basic concepts of risk assessment and advanced techniques of risk assessment  - After fininshing the course you will have a very good understanding about:
What is risk assessment.
The steps of a complete risk assessment.
The different types of hazards you might face in your work place.
The different techniques of hazard identification.
How to weight , evaluate and control the risks.
How to record and review your risk assessment.
How to use some advanced techniques of risk assessments (such as: HAZOP , Fault tree analysis and Event tree analysis).
Hope that you enjoy the course.
HAPPY LEARNING
Who this course is for:
HSE Managers/Engineers
Managers and persons with responsibilities where risk assessment is needed
Operations/process engineers
Any others who are interested in HSE fiels

What you'll learn

What is risk assessment

What are the benefits of conducting a risk assessment in your workplace

The criteria for suitable & sufficient risk assessments

The five steps of a risk assessment

Various types of hazrads

Various techniques of hazard identification

Identify people at risk

How to weight and evaluate the magnitude of the risk

How to control risks and the factors to be considered in selecting control measures

Recording and updating risk assessments

Using some advanced techniques of Risk Assessment (HAZOP , Fault tree analysis and Event tree analysis)

Requirements

  • You will need a copy of Adobe XD 2019 or above. A free trial can be downloaded from Adobe.
  • No previous design experience is needed.
  • No previous Adobe XD skills are needed.

Course Content

27 sections • 95 lectures
Expand All Sections
1-Introduction
1
1.1-Introduction
2-Important Terms
1
2.1-Important Terms
3-Introduction about Risk Assessment
3
3.1-What is Risk Assessment
3.2-Benefits of Risk Assessment
3.3-Criteria for suitable and sufficient risk assessment
4-The five steps of risk assessment
1
4.1-The five steps of risk assessment
5-First step: Hazard identification
14
5.1-Hazard identification
5.2-Types of hazards
5.3-Physical hazards
5.4-Mechanical hazards
5.5-Chemical hazards
5.6-Biological hazards
5.7-Ergonomics hazards
5.8-Psychological hazards
5.9-Hazards identification techniques (Workplace inspection)
5.10-Hazards identification techniques (Job hazard analysis)
5.11-Hazards identification techniques (Workforce involvement)
5.12-Hazards identification techniques (Manufacturer's information and MSDS)
5.13-Hazards identification techniques (Incidents/ill-health data )
5.14-Hazards identification techniques (Legislation )
6-Step 2: Identify people at risk
1
6.1-Identify people at risk
7-Step 3 : Risk estimation , evaluation and control
9
7.1-Risk estimation
7.2-Risk evaluation
7.3-Hierarchy of controls
7.4-Hierarchy of controls (Elimination)
7.5-Hierarchy of controls (Reduction)
7.6-Hierarchy of controls (Isolation)
7.7-Hierarchy of controls (Control exposure)
7.8-Hierarchy of controls (Personal protective equipment)
7.9-Factors affecting choice of control measures
8-Step 4: Record the findings of the risk assessment
1
8.1-Record the findings of the risk assessment
9-Step 5: Review and update of risk assessment
1
9.1-Review and update of risk assessment
10-Risk assessment case study
1
10.1-Case study
11-Advanced techniques of risk assessment
8
11.1-Advanced techniques of risk assessment (Introduction)
11.2-HAZOP (Explanation)
11.3-HAZOP (Case study)
11.4-Fault tree analysis VS Event tree analysis
11.5-Fault tree analysis (Explanation)
11.6-Fault tree analysis (Example)
11.7-Event tree analysis (Explanation)
11.8-Event tree analysis (Example)
12-Thank you
1
12.1-Thank you