Rank: Super forum user
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This is probably fairly specific to construction.
The CLC has published guidance concerning face coverings: http://www.constructionl...n-during-Coronavirus.pdf
This says "The use of face coverings or PPE is not required in response to coronavirus in offices or whilst carrying out construction activities and the Government guidance on Working safely during coronavirus (COVID-19) – Construction and other outdoor workstates that:Workplaces should not encourage the precautionary use of extra PPE to protect against COVID-19 outside clinical settings or when responding to a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19."
However, the very next paragraph says "Where construction workers are not required to wear PPE for their specific task and their workplace meets all of the criteria below, their employer should make available, as a minimum, face coverings." The criteria are: "an enclosed space, where social distancing isn’t always possible, where they come into contact with others they do not normally meet".
Since offices are indoors, I doubt you can 100% guarantee 2m sapcing, and someone might turn up (delivery drivers, for example - and the HSE has been adamant tyou have to let them in to use facilities), this seems to be pretty much saying constryuction employers must provide face coverings, ubnless your workers are 100% of teh time in teh open air. According to this you should certainly make face coverings available to anyone visiting a different site or office.
Is anyone doing this?
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We have been doing this for a while - its father down the guidance i think say something like "supporting those who wish to wear face covering" we stress they are not PPE (but that message is getting blured as well now!) and the importance of hygine when putting on and takeing off. Our staff are offerd a choice between resuable and single use - we have single use for vistors.
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I will ask again - "make available" is that with a charge?
After all it is only true PPE which must be supplied FOC. Union's need to be careful what they lobby for.
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I will ask again - "make available" is that with a charge?
After all it is only true PPE which must be supplied FOC. Union's need to be careful what they lobby for.
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Anything provided for the purposes of H&S is FOC not just PPE, as per HASAWA. Chris
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Is this truly for the purposes of H&S under HASAW? After all the only regulatory "specification" defining a face covering (made under the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act) is that it is "a covering of any type that covers a person's mouth and nose". So just what should be made available? The agitators will keep going until we are all swathed in a minimum of medical masks.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Is this truly for the purposes of H&S under HASAW? After all the only regulatory "specification" defining a face covering (made under the Public Health (Control of Disease) Act) is that it is "a covering of any type that covers a person's mouth and nose". So just what should be made available? The agitators will keep going until we are all swathed in a minimum of medical masks.
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We keep saying face coverings are not PPE as they are not intended to protect employees from a risk arising out of work activities. They are a measure (not a control) applied to limit the spread of the covid-19 virus. As they are out of the scope of the Health and Safety at Work Act there is no obligation on employers or shops or transport companies to supply them FOC.
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Originally Posted by: Roundtuit I will ask again - "make available" is that with a charge?
After all it is only true PPE which must be supplied FOC. Union's need to be careful what they lobby for.
We have chosen to do it free of charge - as a "good employer" but how long that is finacialy viable is questionable. I agree not PPE so we could charge if we wanted - or just tell people to get their own if they wanted them.
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But have employers decided they are a control measure in their RA, because they want employees to work closer than is currently recommended. So, though they are not PPE as they do not protect the user they are being recommended as a potential control measure for collective control. I’m not suggesting they are provided for journey to and from work, but as part of someone’s RA to allow employees to be closer than current guidance suggests (unless another measure is in place ie 1m plus). The Gov have made the lines very blurry regarding this, public health issues, which is brought into the workplace. However, if employers want to work in such a way and specifying it as a control then surly, they should provide.
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The government have been very clear they do not want supplies of medical devices / PPE decimated by widespread use.
Instead we have this theatre production of placebo protection where each individual can choose their own in the event they do not have a "reasonable excuse".
Visor, vented mask, snood, multi-layer... all have issues with the protection offered to others and the wearer which in a critical assessment would dimiss them from being "suitable and sufficient" as a control measure.
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2 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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The government have been very clear they do not want supplies of medical devices / PPE decimated by widespread use.
Instead we have this theatre production of placebo protection where each individual can choose their own in the event they do not have a "reasonable excuse".
Visor, vented mask, snood, multi-layer... all have issues with the protection offered to others and the wearer which in a critical assessment would dimiss them from being "suitable and sufficient" as a control measure.
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2 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
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On the BBC news this morning 9am, they had someone (sorry didn’t get their name) who has been studying the use and effectiveness of face covers and they showed how the air expelled is altered by the mask, keeping it closer to the head. It also said that the coverings also stop the larger droplets, which they feel are the real problem, not the finer droplets which stay in the air (sometimes for hours). I tried to see if I could find the interview on the internet but failed, sorry. Whether they work or not is debatable, however this guy this morning was convincing, showing thermographic film of someone coughing and the air flow. Additionally, it is what is being recommended when in close quarters with others (trains and buses, hair dressers etc). You could not blame a company for then putting it into an assessment as a control. I agree there are all sorts of issues with their use, spec, how long can they be used for, temp to wash re-usable ones, glasses steaming up to name but a few. Chris
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Originally Posted by: chris42 But have employers decided they are a control measure in their RA, because they want employees to work closer than is currently recommended.
We have been very clear that they not an acceptable control measure to allow the 2 M to be reduced, we make them avialable if collegues "want to wear them". Where we have to provide face coverings in accordance with guidance (e.g close contact services) then this is made very clear why we are doing it. But your right Chris i think the message about if they are PPE or not is becomeing very blured.
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What was good at the start of this pandemic was the complete absence of "expert opinion".
What is currently wrong is all the increasingly contradictory "expert opinion" e.g. the debate of droplet size, how far a cough can travel, to sing or not .......
Thermographic images in a laboratory look impressive but do they reflect real life across the whole population? And now we move to the next level - why can't we, they are..... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-53896372
How's about as a profession we take this public health issue and actually treat it as a workplace risk - face coverings would not pass a reasonable assessement. Edited by user 24 August 2020 19:09:29(UTC)
| Reason: I want to jump off the cliff because they did.....
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Rank: Super forum user
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What was good at the start of this pandemic was the complete absence of "expert opinion".
What is currently wrong is all the increasingly contradictory "expert opinion" e.g. the debate of droplet size, how far a cough can travel, to sing or not .......
Thermographic images in a laboratory look impressive but do they reflect real life across the whole population? And now we move to the next level - why can't we, they are..... https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-53896372
How's about as a profession we take this public health issue and actually treat it as a workplace risk - face coverings would not pass a reasonable assessement. Edited by user 24 August 2020 19:09:29(UTC)
| Reason: I want to jump off the cliff because they did.....
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I don't understand the teachers' problem, quoted in the BBC article above as: "The guidance is silent on what schools should do if staff or pupils want to wear face coverings"
Well in that case it is up to the schools to decide their own policy on this, just as they do about dress codes and uniforms. That's perfectly clear. What's the issue?
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1 user thanked Kate for this useful post.
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10 years ago i resigned as Vice Chair of Governerous of a local primary school, part of the reason is was that teachers had become terrified of being sued for minor injuries to children - hence safety was "not my job" they wanted cast iron instyructions to follow. As on OSH professional i found more of my time being pent dealing with school issues for free than my paid work!
On top of this their trade unions have created a climate where lots of teachers expect to be protected from everything. It may have changed but while parents could be fined for keeping thier kids out of school the list of reasonable reasons a teacher could have a paid day off was incredible.
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That report states in one place "The guidance is silent on what schools should do if staff or pupils want to wear face coverings," says Geoff Barton of the ASCL head teachers' union. Then a bit further down it states The government's guidance, issued in early July, says Public Health England does not recommend using face coverings in school. But then again PHE is being broken up isn’t it. The thing is the Gov want everyone else to decide what they are going to do, that way they don’t have to take responsibility when it all goes wrong. A report from Scotland said that 17 teachers had caught it (but, O no, not from pupils who show no symptoms) but from one another at a special school in Dundee. Yes, any expert study in anything will vary to the real world. So, the thermographic film shown will vary as we have all seen people not wearing the coverings properly, some people’s heads are bigger than others so they will fit tighter, and conversely the small headed people more loosely. However, it should be true for the “95 percentile” of the population where if you put anything in front of your mouth it will deflect / alter the air flow and take energy out of it. But no one safety measure is often enough, it is normally a combination of things, depending on which cheese slice you are considering. Chris
Edited by user 25 August 2020 08:15:56(UTC)
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Face coverings and face masks at work during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak
https://www.hse.gov.uk/coronavirus/ppe-face-masks/face-coverings-and-face-masks.htm
Evaluating the protection afforded by surgical masks against influenza bioaerosols Gross protection of surgical masks compared to filtering facepiece respirators
https://www.hse.gov.uk/research/rrpdf/rr619.pdf
Originally Posted by: chris42
On the BBC news this morning 9am, they had someone (sorry didn’t get their name) who has been studying the use and effectiveness of face covers and they showed how the air expelled is altered by the mask, keeping it closer to the head. It also said that the coverings also stop the larger droplets, which they feel are the real problem, not the finer droplets which stay in the air (sometimes for hours). I tried to see if I could find the interview on the internet but failed, sorry. Whether they work or not is debatable, however this guy this morning was convincing, showing thermographic film of someone coughing and the air flow. Additionally, it is what is being recommended when in close quarters with others (trains and buses, hair dressers etc). You could not blame a company for then putting it into an assessment as a control. I agree there are all sorts of issues with their use, spec, how long can they be used for, temp to wash re-usable ones, glasses steaming up to name but a few. Chris
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And there was an interesting article in The Lancet:
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanres/article/PIIS2213-2600(20)30323-4/fulltext
with a host of references to sate your desire for knowledge
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The question about “science” is not whether the person presenting their case is convincing or not. It’s whether others (their peers) have repeated the experiment and gotten same the same results and whether they have been able to identify any flaws in the method. This process takes time and unfortunately in the current situation where people expect the “scientific truth” to be on tap we don’t have that time. Most of is basically guesswork until has been evaluated and challenged.
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I've just had this through https://schoolsweek.co.uk/government-to-u-turn-on-masks-in-schools/
I suspect an announcement is in the offing...
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