Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Health & Safety At Work
I'll try a shortcut on here .
My job as a renal / dialysis delivery driver includes regular deliveries to patients homes of which on many occasions we are required to take the boxes upstairs.
These boxes weigh 11kg each and often there are in excess of 50-60 at a time.
So after 25-30 trips upstairs carrying 22kg i am ready to drop !!
Looking on the HSE website it's a minefield of information , is there anybody on here that could say if that kind of thing is acceptable or too excessive ??
Thanks in advance.
My job as a renal / dialysis delivery driver includes regular deliveries to patients homes of which on many occasions we are required to take the boxes upstairs.
These boxes weigh 11kg each and often there are in excess of 50-60 at a time.
So after 25-30 trips upstairs carrying 22kg i am ready to drop !!
Looking on the HSE website it's a minefield of information , is there anybody on here that could say if that kind of thing is acceptable or too excessive ??
Thanks in advance.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Dajstar. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Each box weighs 11kg , there could be up to 60 boxes to go upstairs on any one delivery , usually no more than 10 deliveries per day of which around half will be upstairs deliveries .
Doing just one of those is knackering , doing two or three in a row is shattering. There does not seem to be any precise figures on what is acceptable health and safety wise , seems to be more at the employers discretion .
Doing just one of those is knackering , doing two or three in a row is shattering. There does not seem to be any precise figures on what is acceptable health and safety wise , seems to be more at the employers discretion .
According to the Health & Safety website, there's no limit on how great a weight can be lifted:
http:// www.hse .gov.uk /msd/fa q-manha nd.htm
http://
Ah that's good. So long as you are not overweight, your doorstep time is not being timed and you are getting the job done within scale (based on just 11kg at a time) I don't see any real issue. Are you taking schedules breaks? If you find you have to skip breaks in order to make up time you must let your employer know
Would a sack barrow help? You can get a stair climbing one like as this....
http:// www.sac ktrucks direct. co.uk/s tair-cl imber-t rucks.h tml
Not a recommendation just a suggestion and there are numerous others on the market. I always find it useful to offer a solution when you talk to the employer. Do you have a tail lift on your van? could you have an assistant? Opportunitiy for an apprentice maybe?
http://
Not a recommendation just a suggestion and there are numerous others on the market. I always find it useful to offer a solution when you talk to the employer. Do you have a tail lift on your van? could you have an assistant? Opportunitiy for an apprentice maybe?
Thanks folks , always confused .... If you had to do this yourself you would understand what the issue is , i am reasonably fit and not one of our drivers are overweight but there are limits as to what you should be putting your body through , what would you consider to be too much regarding carrying upstairs ?? Personally i think that one person having to carry over 500 kilos of stuff up the stairs is too much when you have to do this 3-4 times in one day (also it is usually very warm in these homes as people are ill), our days are usually around 12 hours long anyway as we drive long distances around the UK doing this.