Rank: New forum user
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Hi All, Some advise please on compliance with The Display Screen Equipment Regulations for organisations that have 100's of DSE Users either in large offices or now potentially working from home. Do you have to physically carry out a DSE Risk Assessment on each individual or can you apply some common sense and provide training and then issue the HSE Checklist and then only assess someone that identifies any issues?
Or how do people manage this issue, whilst complying with the regulations Thanks in anticipation
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Rank: Super forum user
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Your "common sense" solution is the right one and it can be made even less onerous by buying an off-the-shelf software system that will deliver and record the training, issue the checklists, chase for completion and flag up the issues that do need to be looked at.
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1 user thanked Kate for this useful post.
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Rank: Forum user
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I would agree, that with such large numbers there needs to be a bit of common sense. You need to consider what you want to achieve, for me it is that people are comfortable at their work stations and are not likely to suffer injury from using them. If you have large numbers it makes sense to do a bit of online training and self certification via questionaires. I would just suggest that when you are walking around be vigulant and just look for the odd person who is outside the norm and whose work station looks different from what you would expect to see, then a bit of intervention would be called for. For once I would agree that an online package would be a good thing.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Our staff do a self assessment with e-learning module and guidance on set up. We will not be visiting anyones home. If specialist equipment is required we will arrange for an expert to visit. Our offices are set up in similar ways and we will require one assessment for the main area where the person is working.
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Rank: Forum user
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We use an online solution and have dedicated modules for temp homeworking. I think the next issue will be hot desking. Not sure how that will pan out.
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Rank: Super forum user
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We have about 450 staff. Same as other replies:
All new starts do an e-learning package (old hands can request to do the same package if they want, but I don't recall anyone asking to work through DSE setup training a second time). Then there's an online self-assessment form to complete, the first few screens of which are actually a condensed reminder of what the workstation is supposed to be. People that routinely work at home (1 day/week or more) need to do an assessment for both home and office.
About 100 of our staff are not in the UK and are all in jurisdictions without any equivalent legislation. They do exactly the same process, but get informed that the references to free eye-tests don't apply to them, though we do subsidise eye-tests and glasses for those staff if they want them (actually to a slightly higher value than we pay for the UK staff).
We waived the home assessment for the 'temporary' work-at-home during pandemic, but once we have offices re-opened for everyone we will be rescinding the exemption. Actually, quite a few of the 'temporary' work-at-home staff have done one anyway, though there's quite a few who don't have a compliant workstation who have been instructed to modify their working pattern - more breaks etc. That kind of thing probbaly did make sense if it had been temporary, but looks less credible a year on...
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Rank: Super forum user
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I'm with Gerry. This is one of the few issues where an off the shelf online solution can work for any organisation that doesn't easily fit to some clearly defined norm of e.g. a widget manufacturer or standard office. Relatively easy to predict how people's workstations differ, e.g. where they use mulitiple screens and an online solution can cater for such variances.
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Rank: New forum user
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Hi all, I'm the CEO of a tech startup doing something new in the online DSE assessment space ( http://vitrueremote.com/). We come from an orthopaedic surgery background and we're working hard to build solutions that give meaningful reductions in musculoskeletal risk and musculoskeletal pain levels. If anyone here would be interested in a discussion I'd love to learn from your experience moving to online DSE assessments and especially if anyone is dealing with it in a hot desking scenario. I hope you don't mind the post, if it's outside the scope let me know and I'll remove. Thanks
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Rank: Forum user
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Agree with the straightforward and practical methods above. HSE states: “The employer is not normally expected to carry out home visits unless there is a special requirement, such as a disability” which is what we do, using specialists where needed. The worker signs that they have suitable space/domestic arrangements. We use standard DSE assessment for the workstation plus a corporate risk assessment of how we manage home working then a short self-assessment of the home environment by the worker. Beyond recurring discussion of how you do this, once your system (whatever it is) is up and running it’s a good idea to audit it. Are there many/any incidents, complaints or requests for additional support? There are various packages to create a staff survey, so we did a short, anonymous one and got good response. Then you evaluate against a checklist which is the HSE’s three elements, plus your policy (you do have a policy, don’t you?): DSE/ergonomics, mental health and work environment. If you’re doing the simple things right you will find you comply and have evidence of this.
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Rank: New forum user
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The HSE guidance on this states that:
"Where the regulations do apply, you should carry out a DSE assessment for individual workers. In most cases you do not need to visit them to carry out the assessment, unless you decide there is a need to do so. Your workers may complete a self-assessment provided they have been given suitable training, for example by explaining how to use an ergonomic checklist or self-assessment tool."
I would advise including DSE training in an induction package, keeping a training matrix and refreshing this training on an annual/bi-annual basis. This coupled with DSE self assessments from employees will ensure compliance.
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