Preventing fatigue-based workplace disasters

Tired and overworked employees cause situations that can put countless lives in peril. Follow these guidelines to keep your organisation safe.

Overtime workers and employees regularly scheduled for extended hours face a 61% higher rate of hazardous injury, and sleep deprivation has been a contributing factor to such disasters as Chernobyl and the Space Shuttle Challenger explosion.
 
There are several steps organisations can take to ensure that they are helping to manage worker fatigue from an organisational standpoint, especially in heavily afflicted industries such as healthcare, aviation, mining, hospitality, and security.
 
These include:
 
  • Obtaining employee feedback regarding preferable work schedules
  • Creating a fatigue management plan with effective strategies for relief, such as calculated naps, physical activity, and frequent short breaks
  • Designing training programmes that encompass tips for sleep maintenance, nutrition, work/family life balance, and proper use of stimulants
  • Designating a quiet, temperature-controlled room equipped with eye masks and ear plugs for on-site resting
  • Ensuring that dangerous tasks are completed during ordinary work hours, or with special precautions and safeguards
 
In addition, special regard should be given to employees whose jobs consist of night labor and shift work. Oftentimes, these workers’ disrupted sleep patterns results in shift work sleep disorder (SWSD), which can lead to poor judgment and the increased likelihood of cutting corners.
 
Measures to address these concerns include:
 
  • Forbidding workers from spending more than two to four consecutive days on any single night shift
  • Allowing two nights’ recovery after multiple working nights
  • Rotating shifts forward to align with the body’s naturally occurring circadian rhythms
  • Avoiding schedules that begin earlier than 6am, since early mornings are associated with shorter sleep schedules
  • Identifying employees who struggle with shift work, such as those over age 50
 
“Each individual has his or her own tolerance for fatigue-inducing activities, but establishing guidelines and internal mandates can help the vast majority of employees minimise working when fatigued and insulate the company from fatigue-related risks,” said Leslie Tarnacki, vice president of HR at WorkForce Software.
 
For more on this topic, click here.
 
 
 
 

Recent articles & video

ERA calls company director's daughter 'employee'

Upton admits brain drain 'possibility' for New Zealand

What NZ employers need to consider before implementing a living wage

Which countries hired the most expats in 2023?

Most Read Articles

Company blocks former worker's employment with competitor

Unjustified dismissal: technician who didn't have enough work wins over $20,000

Employer assigns manager to smaller area – is it constructive dismissal?