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Compliance For Safety Shower & Eye/Face Washes With All Round Safety

Friday 20 September 2019, 11:41AM

By Beckie Wright

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Because eye damage can be caused in a matter of seconds through workplace accidents, there are strict rules governing precautionary measures and equipment required to mitigate the risk to workers. This is a very real issue in New Zealand. ACC statistics show that between July 2016 and June last year, there were 6687 new claims for eye injuries which occurred on farms or in industrial, commercial or service locations to those who worked there. The total cost of existing and new claims over the same period was more than $2.8 million.

Dalton International have been supplying Safety Showers and Eye/Face Wash units into New Zealand since late 2012.  At the outset they recognised how important it was for end users to understand the requirements and specifications necessary to ensure installed units comply with recognised standards, guidelines or best practice.

While Worksafe don’t have specific guidance on Safety Showers and Eye/Face Wash units for New Zealand, compliance with a standard from overseas is recognised as being “reasonably practicable steps” where the standard is equivalent to or higher than the New Zealand Standard, or where there is not an equivalent New Zealand Standard.  Worksafe advise that a safety shower and eye wash facility may be required in relation to a risk in any workplace, when the risk cannot be eliminated.  This means that if a company is handling hazardous substances and there is a risk to employees from exposure to these hazardous substances, appropriate systems must be in place to minimise harm to employees.  

It should be noted that Safety Showers and Eye/Face Wash units do not replace PPE appropriate to the workplace risk. In Australia and New Zealand in 2007, a regional standard called AS4775:2007 “Emergency Eyewash and Shower Equipment” was adopted based on the internationally accepted American National Standards Institute standard.  ANSI Z358.1 sets the guidelines for safety equipment fixtures and installation practices, including plumbed and self-contained emergency showers, plumbed and self-contained eyewash equipment, eye/face wash equipment, combination units and supplemental equipment.   It also sets out how the equipment should perform, as well as testing procedures to ensure proper operation, installation, maintenance and training.

The majority of units sold in New Zealand comply with AS4775-2007. Guardian Safety Showers and Eye/Face Wash units sold by Dalton International in New Zealand comply with ANSI Z358.1-2014, consequently meeting Worksafe requirements, and to find out more about safety helmets, safety equipment suppliers and safety gear Auckland please go to https://www.allroundsafety.co.nz .