IOSH Ready Questions and Answers PDF
IOSH Ready Questions and Answers PDF
IOSH Ready Questions and Answers PDF
PPE
.Objective
Easy to measure and collect - if it is difficult people may not wish to do this and the exercise
.becomes pointless
Cost-effective in terms of effort required to gather the information; if staff are spending
hours a day collecting and analysisng data this may be preventing them form doing their
.other roles
Understood and owned by the organisation or group whose performance is being measured -
there is no point putting together a report on the indicators of performance if no one but the
report writer understands what it all means
Your name (or the name of who is carrying out the risk assessment)
What are the different ways a chemical can enter the body?
Ingestion (eating/drinking) .1
2. Inhalation (breathing)
3. Skin contact (absorption)
4. Injection (needles or through wounds)
5. Eye contact (through the mucus membranes of
the eyes)
List the factors which are to be balanced against the benefits of a risk
control when reducing risks ‘so far as is reasonably practicable’
"If the cost, in terms of time, effort, money or inconvenience, associated with the workplace precaution
outweighs the benefits of the risk reduction, then it is not reasonably practicable to use that workplace
precaution."
So the answer is time, effort, money or inconvenience. List the benefits to you and your organisation of carrying
out a risk assessment
To identify whether you are doing enough to protect your workforce and others that are affected by your
activities.
- Fatality
- Major injury
- Dangerous occurrence
- Certain occupational diseases
- Accident which results in someone not at work being taken to hospital
Best regards,
Insomnia.
Stress.
Anxiety.
Irritability.
Loss of confidence.
Agrophobia.
Thoughts of self harm.
Guilt.
Convulsions these are involuntary contractions of muscles caused by the electrical current passing through
them.
Refuelling
Other risks could be Hazardous substances e.g., Oil, coolant, battery acid ' COSHH'
o Examples could be: workplace inspections, machine guarding checks, behavioural safety
observations etc.
Reactive monitoring is where you are REACTING to something, such as an incident. Therefore it takes
place AFTER the incident has occurred. The intention is to keep track of incidents so you can identify
trends.
o Examples could be: accident and ill-health reports and near-miss reports.
Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations, regulation 14: Responsibility to work in accordance with
training/instruction and to make the employer aware of dangerous/unsafe situations.
Working at Height Regulations, regulation 14: Responsibility to report defects which present a fall risk, to work at
height in accordance with training/instructions.
Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, article 23: Responsibility to take reasonable care, to co -operate with
their employer, to inform their employer of unsafe situations.
Manual Handling Operations Regulations, regulation 5: Responsibility to make use of any system provided by their
employer.
Personal Protective Equipment Regulations, regulation 10: Responsibility to use PPE as per training/instructions
and to return PPE to its storage location after use.
In the UK there are a number of different Acts and Regulations which apertain to waste and disposal. The main
one is the Environmental Protection Act 1990.
This establishes that anyone who produces, imports, carries, keeps, t reats or disposes of waste has a duty of care.
In addition Article 4 of the EU Waste Framework Directive sets out 5 steps for dealing with waste: the waste
hierarchy.
Prevention
Re-use
Recycling
Other recovery (such as energy recovering from incineration or anaerobic digestion)
Disposal
6. PAT testing
The 2 reasons are that understanding the triangle helps you develop strategies for PREVENTION and for
EXTINGUISHING a fire.
To prevent a fire you simply have to stop the 3 elements of fire coming together. Usually that is by keeping fuel
and ignition sources separate. In some higher risk industries the oxygen levels are controlled.
To extinguish a fire, different extinguishing methods act on different parts of the triangle. Water cools it down
(heat/ignition), turning off the gas acts on the fuel, foam separates the fuel from the air, FM200 acts on the
chemical reaction itself.
What are the differences between CIVIL law and CRIMINAL law?
Civil Law.
Claim for damages are initiated by the person who sustained the damage.
You can insure against claims made against you under civil law.
Criminal Law.
It is intended to punish bodies corporate and individuals with, for example fines or imprisonment.
Traps - again in the lifting mechanism, but also the possibility of trapping the driver between the cab and a solid
structure