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lamdawn  
#1 Posted : 14 October 2014 11:03:50(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
lamdawn

Am a newly registered person to this site though did used to frequently and enjoy the various discussions. Am now after help.

I am not sure what specialist or advisor to search for - we need someone to assess our office from a lighting, ventilation, printer emission and general wellbeing point of view. Where I used to work I know we had someone come out and assess desk location, VDU use etc but I can't think what sort of adviser we need? Any suggestions of what to put in the "search" box and qualifications/memberships I should be looking for gratefully received.

Thank you.
creative2  
#2 Posted : 14 October 2014 11:15:57(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
creative2

I would suggest you need a generalist consultant but a lot of the items you list you may well be able to do yourself.
You do not give any competency levels, qualifications experience etc?
There is a lot of information on the HSE site relating to low hazard work environments which will be of help.
Hope that is of assistance.
kevkel  
#3 Posted : 14 October 2014 12:36:46(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
kevkel

Lamdawn,
PM me your email address and i can send you a workstation self assessment and a brief guidance sheet.
Kevin
KieranD  
#4 Posted : 14 October 2014 17:01:17(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Depends what you have in mind by the term'wellbeing' and the purposes of your assessment.

A (registered) ergonomist can assess the physical compability of the elements you refer to; a chartered occupational psychologist with postgrad training/education in ergonomics can do the lot.

Be clear on the scope of the assessment. Is it simply for safety compliance, safety/health or equality or the lot?
aud  
#5 Posted : 16 October 2014 13:22:38(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
aud

Do you actually have (or suspect) a particular problem? Do the offices look unpleasant or dodgy in some way? If not, realistically what do you want from such 'checks'?

Many organisations use a basic checklist (as someone has provided) for office managers, and then deal with problems IF and when they may arise. Risks are low. See also the HSE example risk assessment for offices.

Most safety practitioners - I am assuming you are not one - should be able to give basic feedback on workstation set-ups, which includes an element of lighting, etc. Personally I am sceptical as to the actual value of these in most well-run office environments. Fire safety would be my priority in the absence of any actual ergonomic problem.
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