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An evaluation of occupational health risk assessment methodologies from South African enterprises: noise risk assessment field study
Rikhotso, O; Morodi, T J; Masekameni, D M.
Affiliation
  • Rikhotso, O; Environmental Health, Tshwane University of Technology, Tshwane, South Africa. Tshwane. ZA
  • Morodi, T J; Environmental Health, Tshwane University of Technology, Tshwane, South Africa. Tshwane. ZA
  • Masekameni, D M; Occupational Health Division, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. Johannesburg. ZA
Occup. health South. Afr. (Online) ; 29(2): :65-74, 2023. figures, tables
Article in En | AIM | ID: biblio-1527014
Responsible library: CG1.1
ABSTRACT

Background:

The South African occupational health and safety regulations, prescribing risk assessments be conducted by employers, are non-prescriptive with regard to the tools and techniques to be used. Consequently, companies freely adopt the numerous available tools and techniques from which risk management decisions are derived. Thus, risk management, ensuing from the results derived from these tools and techniques, is likely to vary from company to company.

Objective:

The objective of the study was to evaluate risk assessment processes and methodologies that are used and recorded in noise risk assessment reports, in four manufacturing companies.

Methods:

This was a case study, whereby risk assessment records were obtained from four South African companies with different operational units, from the manufacturing and utilities sectors.

Results:

There were inter- and intra-company variations in the processes related to the legal context in which the risk assessments were conducted, the risk assessment tools and techniques used, the risk criteria definitions, the statements about the effectiveness of controls in use, and the risk evaluation outcomes. Inter- and intra-company variations in risk rankings and risk prioritisation outcomes were also observed ­ a consequence of the risk perceptions of the assessors assigning a risk level to the noise hazard. In some instances, the adopted risk assessment tools and techniques categorised the risk from noise that was at or above regulated health and safety standards as 'insignificant', which those companies used as justification for taking no further measures to eliminate or reduce the risk.

Conclusion:

The use of different risk assessment processes, tools and techniques resulted in some facilities categorising noise as an insignificant hazard, which may contribute to high noise emissions and uncontrolled exposures.
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