The ISO 45001:2018 Implementation Handbook: Guidance on Building an Occupational Health and Safety Management System
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About this ebook
Dennis Sasseville
Sustainability Quality Systems Director
Worthen Industries, Inc.
This handbook explains how an organization can use a management system to both control and improve its safety or occupational health and safety performance. It provides guidance in building the OH&S management system in support of the organization's operations, linking the management system to the requirements of ISO 45001:2018, to support third-party certification. Included in the text are best practices as well as common pitfalls or weaknesses I have observed in various organizations. For those organizations certified according to OHSAS 18001:2007, the book highlights the changes required to upgrade to the new international standard.
The ISO 45001:2018 Implementation Handbook is formatted to describe each clause of ISO 45001:2018 in four sections:
Correspondence with the current OHSAS 18001 standard
The ISO requirement
Guidance on conformance to the requirements
Questions for internal auditors
A CD included with this handbook contains internal auditor check sheets that can be used to assess conformance to ISO 45001:2018.
Electronic Books Only: CD-ROM files are available for download.
Milton P. Dentch
Milton Dentch was born and raised in the Worcester, Massachusetts, area. He has a BS in mechanical engineering from Worcester Polytechnic Institute and an MS in quality management systems from the National Graduate School of Quality Management (NGS). After college, he worked as an engineer in the paper industry for five years, and then he worked as an engineer and manager at the Polaroid Corporation in Waltham, Massachusetts, for 27 years. He was also plant manager for the Custom Coating and Laminating plant in Worcester for the Furon Corporation. Milt has over 40 years’ experience in a wide variety of industries, including pulp and paper, chemical, plastic and rubber processing, battery manufacturing, converting, electronics assembly, and machine building. Milt currently provides consulting, training, and auditing related to the International Organization for Standardization requirements for quality, environmental, and safety management systems. He has conducted over 500 audits worldwide for large and small companies. His clients have been as diverse as a floating oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico to an electronics manufacturer in the Ukraine with 4000 employees. Milt is an RABQSA qualified Lead Auditor for Quality and Environmental Management Systems and a Registrar approved OHSAS 18001 Lead Auditor. In 2012, Milt wrote Fall of an Icon—Polaroid after Edwin H. Land (Riverhaven Books), an insider’s history of the Polaroid Corporation. His book The ISO 14001:2015 Implementation Handbook was published by ASQ Quality Press in 2016.
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The ISO 45001:2018 Implementation Handbook - Milton P. Dentch
Preface
I started my professional career in the paper industry in the early 1960s, working for a company that manufactured pulp and paper-making machinery. As a young engineer, I traveled to paper mills all over the USA and Canada. The mills provided an engineer with excellent exposure to chemical, mechanical, and electrical engineering concepts and an understanding that paper mills and wood yards and pulping areas presented a myriad of safety hazards to the workers. High-speed rotating equipment created opportunities for employees to become entangled in the machinery; the vacuum pumps were very noisy, and there was also potential for exposure to toxic or corrosive chemicals.
During my first visit to a paper mill at the Maine-Canadian border, I recall walking through the mill during a time when the machine had experienced a major paper break. There were large holes in the floor near the machine, where the waste paper, referred to as broke, would be shoveled down below the paper machine for reprocessing by gigantic, sharp blades. The holes in the floor were not guarded or blocked during these times. I was alerted by my escort to stay away from the area because, with all the stacks of paper being pushed around, it was not clear where the holes were; only the experienced operators should be in those areas. I was told horror stories by the old paper makers that every few years a fatality would result when an operator would fall into the broke holes. Over time, the mills developed techniques to properly dispose of the waste paper in a much safer way.
I left the paper industry in 1969 to work as an engineer and manager for the Polaroid film and camera company. I had direct responsibility for health and safety in chemical manufacturing, specialty coatings, similar to the paper industry, and battery manufacturing. All of the areas involved moving machinery and harmful chemicals. I gained a lot of manufacturing experience in those 27 years and an appreciation for the importance of maintaining a safe workplace. After I left Polaroid, I was plant manager for several years at a coating plant, where there was also chemical manufacturing using high-speed rotating equipment.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) was created in 1970 by the signing of the Williams-Steiger Act by President Nixon. I was safety engineer in one of Polaroid’s plants at that time. OSHA’s mission was to prevent work-related injuries, illnesses, and occupational fatalities by issuing and enforcing standards for workplace safety and health and to create a better workplace for all workers. While the high incidences of injuries in industry during the 1960s created a need for action at the federal level, OSHA presented serious concerns for companies like Polaroid. (Note: Information on OSHA is provided at https://www.osha.gov/Publications/all_about_OSHA.pdf.)
Polaroid had highly secretive processes and products, and nonemployees were not allowed access to manufacturing or research areas. Polaroid did not inform workers of the identity of chemicals in containers which were marked X
or Y.
The workers that mixed X
could not work in the area that used chemical Y.
Polaroid management always had a high regard for employee welfare, so, over time, the company adapted to the oversight of the federal OSHA requirements—and despite some fits and starts, Polaroid continually improved its safety performance. I was fortunate to have experienced training in a wide spectrum of workplace safety hazards linked to OSHA requirements.
While OSHA continues to be a subject of criticism for its somewhat excessive bureaucracy and oversight, I believe OSHA, since 1970, has been an important factor in the reduction of workplace injuries in the United States. The injury and ill-health statistics bear this out, although there are still too many worker injuries/ill-health issues occurring every day. I believe an organization can more efficiently address its requirements under OSHA by creating an occupational health and safety (OH&S) management system with certification under the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) process.
In 1998, I became an ISO-qualified auditor and consultant. In the past 20 years, I have conducted quality, environmental, and safety audits in hundreds of plants of all sizes in a wide variety of industry sectors. Observing what allowed some companies to implement a very successful OH&S system, I discovered they were not implementing a safety program; these companies had created a safety management system. The differences between a management system and a program are illustrated below.
Starting with my very first ISO 9001 audit in 1998, I observed the company’s safety issues, even though I was conducting a quality audit. I would often advise my guide during the plant tour that I would notify the company of potential safety issues during the walk-around if the client agreed. My notes would not be included in my formal audit report but would be left with the client. My offer was very rarely refused. I can recall, in some cases, particularly when doing an audit in a large chemical plant, my guide would use his cell phone to record some of the observations I would make.
When BS OHSAS 18001—Occupational Health and Safety Management—was created in 2000, I became qualified to conduct audits to that standard in plants in the United States, South America, and Eastern Europe. During the 18001 audits, I witnessed some of the ways OHSAS 18001, as a management system, could help improve the organization’s safety performance. I also trained internal auditors in several large plants to audit according to the OHSAS 18001 standard.
The ISO 45001:2018 Implementation Handbook explains how an organization can use a management system to both control and improve its safety or occupational health and safety performance. In this handbook, I provide guidance in building the OH&S management system in support of the organization’s operations, linking the management system to the requirements of ISO 45001:2018, to support third-party certification. Included in the text are best practices as well as common pitfalls or weaknesses I have observed in various organizations. For those organizations certified according to OHSAS 18001:2007, I highlight the changes required to upgrade to the new international standard.
The ISO 45001:2018 Implementation Handbook is formatted to describe each clause of ISO 45001:2018 in four sections:
Correspondence with the current OHSAS 18001 standard
The ISO requirement
Guidance on conformance to the requirements
Questions for internal auditors.
I paraphrased the ISO requirements to describe the essence of each requirement in straightforward terms. In the guidance section, where applicable, I organized each clause as a process with inputs and outputs and provided examples of how the clause requirements can be satisfied. A CD included with this handbook contains internal auditor check sheets that can be used to assess conformance to ISO 45001:2018.
The ISO 45001:2018 standard follows the requirements of Annex SL. The International Organization for Standardization created Annex SL, which is intended to harmonize all ISO management systems’ terminology and formatting. It was designed to make it easier for organizations to build their documentation when they have to comply with more than one management system standard. ISO 9001:2015 and ISO 14001:2015 were released using Annex SL formatting. After assisting more than a dozen clients in upgrading ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 to the 2015 requirements—which includes utilizing the structure of Annex SL—I observed some confusion generated by this universal formatting. While the goal of creating a common structure for all ISO standards is certainly noteworthy, some of the terminology embraced by Annex SL is not helpful, in my opinion, especially in relation to providing and maintaining documentation. The handbook outlines my concerns with Annex SL terminology and provides recommendations on how organizations can comply with Annex SL while avoiding its confusing aspects.
I wrote the ISO 45001:2018 implementation handbook with four goals:
Provide guidance to organizations seeking certification to ISO 45001:2018
Assist currently certified OHSAS 18001:2007 organizations in upgrading to ISO 45001:2018, while improving their present OH&S management system
Provide guidance for internal auditors
Provide guidance on interpretation of ISO 45001:2018 requirements.
Chapter 11 of this handbook provides a checklist for self-certification to guide organizations wishing to benefit from conforming to ISO 45001:2018 without having to seek third-party certification.
Chapter 12 provides guidance in facilitating interpretation of the new OH&S management system requirements.
Note: The contents of ISO 45001:2018 have been paraphrased in this book. Paraphrased text, by its nature, can introduce differences in understanding and interpretation. This book should be used in conjunction with ISO 45001:2018 Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems—Requirements with Guidance for Use. The interpretations and paraphrasing of ISO 45001:2018 in this handbook are not authorized by ASQ, ANSI, or the ISO.
1
OHSAS 18001 History and Chronology
Back in the late 1980s and early 1990s, organizations worldwide recognized the need to control and improve health and safety performance and to do so with occupational health and safety management systems. The timing of this recognition was somewhat aligned with the formation of the European Union and the establishment of the international standard for quality management in 1987.
With leadership from the British Standards Institution (BSI), the United Kingdom’s national standards body, the Occupational Health and Safety Assessment Series (OHSAS) Project Group was formed and included representation from many countries. The group published the OHSAS 18000 series in 1999. The series consisted of two specifications: 18001 provided requirements for an occupational health and safety management system, and 18002 supplied implementation