Prompted by Torres' posting about Permits and another thread.
This is aimed mostly at those who work in places where accident rates have progressively reduced since about the Second World War, so that even minor accidents don't tend to be a daily experience.
If you work in health and safety, does your job title say so, or does it still just focus on Safety?
There's the holistic view Safety encompasses health and wellbeing, but in practice, these are still the poor relations, with Safety taking first priority - that's where most of the bad news happens, that cannot be ignored as the consequences happen NOW!!
But, in most working environments the adverse consequences of occupational health risks are MUCH, MUCH worse.
So, as example in the UK, statistics reported on the Health & Safety Executive website paint a portrait of far more days lost at a much, much greater socio-economic cost.
Now, I realise that you might work in an environment where life (at least for the lower levels of society) is "cheap" and the immediate safety risks just simply need to be dealt with as the No 1 priority and you just don't have much time to deal with the risks whose consequences may not be noticed for months, years or decades.
But for most people on these Forums that isn't the case. So, if you are one of them, when are you going to take steps to get Health added to your title (if it isn't already)? After that we can have a debate about all the other things like Welfare (by whatever name)!
Then after that what comes next in the title? "Guy" is OK in a discussion thread! But it's probably not in the title of that "safety guy".
So, is it Officer? - do you want to be a Policeman, when you are there - and if so, who owns health and safety when you are NOT there?
Is it Manager, or even Director? Do you have the power to manage or direct, backed up with control of the resources? Usually not.
So, why not push to be what you should be - an Adviser (with an 'o' or 'e', whichever is your organisation's preference!)?
Get that title sorted and those who should be Managing health and safety might find it easier to remember that is NOT the job of the Safety Guy.