This document discusses machinery safety on farms. It defines machinery and its functions, and notes that machinery can be fascinating but also hazardous. It outlines the shared responsibilities of various stakeholders in ensuring machinery safety, including farm owners, employers, safety professionals, and machinery operators. It explains that most machinery accidents are due to human errors like carelessness rather than equipment failures. The conclusion emphasizes the importance of caution and safe work practices when operating machinery to avoid injuries from being cut, crushed, or struck by flying objects.
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Machinery Safety Tips
1. Machinery Safety Safety Watch
Engr. Segun R. Bello
Lecturer/Research Officer
Content
1.1 Introduction ........................................................................................................ 1
1.2 What is Machinery and Function ........................................................................ 1
1.3 Responsibility for Machinery Safety ................................................................... 2
1.4 Human Factor in Accident and Consequences .................................................... 3
1.5 Conclusion .......................................................................................................... 3
Bibliography.................................................................................................................... 3
1.1 Introduction
There are a number of appealing tasks on the farm for all categories of workers.
Perhaps operating machinery and heavy equipment is one of the more common
needs on the farm. One of the most common causes of injury and death on the farm
is the unsafe use of equipment. These injuries can be prevented by accepting
responsibility for equipment safe-use and taking necessary precautions.
1.2 What is Machinery and Machinery Function
Machinery is any device that transmits or modifies energy to perform a variety of
tasks. Such devices include mechanical,
electrical, hydraulic or hydrostatic devices.
These machines are designed to perform
specific works and are powered by
drivelines, hydraulic oil pressure,
electrical motors, engines, or ground
wheel traction.
Correspondence: Department of Agricultural Engineering Technology Extension Services, Federal College of Agriculture, Ishiagu Ebonyi
State, Nigeria.
2. Machines can be fascinating as well as presenting a number of hazards to those
working around them regardless of how machines are powered. In as much as you
have been trained in what you're doing and you are physically strong enough to work
the equipment.
1.3 Responsibility for Machinery Safety
Responsibility for machinery safety on the farm is a joint responsibility of all the
stakeholders involved in farm operation. The following partners and their
responsibilities are as enumerated below.
Farm Owners are responsible and should therefore accept responsibility for the
safety of their workers. They must ensure that employees and family workers are
trained on the proper and safe ways to do their jobs.
Employers: Full responsibility of providing safety equipment, safety charts and
safe-work procedure are the sole responsibilities of the employer.
Safety Professionals: The risk of injury and illness can be reduced by taking
certain preventive measures such as conducting routine hazard checks on
equipment, buildings etc. - and correcting observed problems immediately. Such
actions as routine hazard checks are the sole responsibility of safety professional
which must be done in accordance with laid down procedures.
Machinery Operators: We all know that machines are inanimate objects in that
they cannot think or reason, but can be adapted to meet the needs of people. Safe
machinery operation primarily depend your interaction with the machines you
operate. The responsibility for machinery safety and continual functionality rests
with the operator, machinery condition, associated workers, and the environment.
Machine Motion: Based on the action or motion of machine components, there
are several dangerous areas which can cause injury, dismemberment, and/or death
of the operator, these parts must be well guided or shielded from direct human
contact. Undue familiarity with particular machinery has made many operators to
underestimate the potential hazards resident in the machine and by so doing ended
up as victims of machinery accident.
In this regard, most machinery injuries were not caused as a result of machine
functionality or breakdown but as a result of carelessness and lackadaisical attitude
to their usage. This is a pointer that most machinery-related accidents minor or
major, casual or fatal results from Human Errors.
Correspondence: Department of Agricultural Engineering Technology Extension Services, Federal College of Agriculture, Ishiagu Ebonyi
State, Nigeria.
3. 1.4 Human Factor in Accident and Consequences
Accidents do not just happen, they are caused. Know that accident never happen
until there is an error; machine error, human error or environmental uncertainties.
Your responsibility therefore as an employer, operator, farm/industry worker and
visitor is to eliminate or minimise these errors to the barest minimum by practicing
safe work practice.
Injuries occurs when Workers are
a. Not paying close attention to work, or
b. When the Operator lost concentration or forgot something and wasnt paying
close attention,
c. When he took a risk, ignored a warning, or
d. When failed to follow safety rules.
Despite the efforts made by manufacturers to make machinery safe, yet all
hazards cannot be totally removed. For instance, some dangerous machine parts
cannot be completely shielded as a result of their functionality; for instance, a totally
enclosed cutting blade could not cut.
1.5 Conclusion
Consequent on the inability of these hazards to be totally eliminated, you can be
cut, crushed, pulled in or struck by an object thrown by these machines. You can also
be injured if you fall while working on or near any of these machines. So workers
must exercise caution when operating these machines.
Bibliography
1 Farm Safety Association fact sheet, 2002. Agricultural machinery hazards 22-340
Woodlawn Road West, Guelph, Ontario (519) 823-5600.
2 George Maher, 1997. Tractor Safety: Stay on Top of It! AE-1121 NDSU publication
HESNI (2002). TRACTOR ACTION. A Step-by-Step Safety Guide Health and Safety
Executive for Northern Ireland 83 Ladas Drive Belfast BT6 9FR Web:
www.hseni.gov.uk E-mail: hseni@detni.gov.uk
3 Health and Safety Executive HSE, 2006. Chainsaws at work Published by the
Health and Safety Executive, 03/06
4 Worksafe Alberta, 2006. Managing Health and Safety in Your Workplace for small
business. SMB002 March 2006
Correspondence: Department of Agricultural Engineering Technology Extension Services, Federal College of Agriculture, Ishiagu Ebonyi
State, Nigeria.