Understanding PPE at Construction Sites – Explainer Video

 Understanding PPE at Construction Sites – Explainer Video

https://youtu.be/4wLU-n9ToZM

 


Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) plays a critical role in safeguarding workers, but it is only one part of an effective safety system.

 

In this explainer session, we cover:

1. Role of PPE in the Hazard Control Hierarchy

2. Types of PPE used at construction sites

3. Correct usage practices

4. Inspection and maintenance essentials

5. Limitations of PPE

6. Importance of engineering controls

7. PPE management systems on-site

8. Common PPE failures and lessons learned

This video is a summary of our session, designed to strengthen awareness, improve compliance, and reinforce the importance of integrating PPE with higher-level controls for better risk mitigation.

Watch, share, and ensure your teams are not just compliant—but truly protected.

 

Regards,

Piyush Tripathi EHS&F

HSE-RM Solutions

Your Partner in Safety...

 

#ConstructionSafety #PPE #WorkplaceSafety #EHS #HSE #SafetyFirst #RiskManagement #IndustrialSafety #SafetyTraining #OccupationalSafety #HazardControl #SafetyAwareness #ZeroHarm #SafetyCulture #EngineeringControls #ConstructionIndustry #SafetyLeadership #HSETraining #SiteSafety #SafetyMatters

OHS at Construction Site

 Dear All,

HSE-RM Solution Presents Learning on-

Understand the concept and imp
ortance of occupational health and safety (OHS). Understand why OHS is critical in construction projects.

1. Meaning of Occupational Health & Safety (OHS)

2. Importance of OHS in Construction Industry

3. Characteristics of Construction Workforce

4. Employer’s Responsibility for Worker Health & Safety

5. Relationship Between Safety, Productivity, and Quality


Occupational Hazards in Construction & Related Diseases. Identify health hazards and occupational diseases.

1. What are Occupational Hazards?

2. Classification of Occupational Hazards

3. Common Occupational Diseases in Construction

4. Long-Term Health Impact of Exposure

5. Key Differences: Accident vs Occupational Disease

6. Control Approach for Occupational Hazards


In this video we cover summary of our session.


Regards,

Piyush Tripathi EHS&F

HSE-RM Solutions

Your Partner In Safety...


https://youtu.be/ZOZ_CPLAeik

Deep Dive Conversation: Why Safety Systems Fail Even When Procedures Exist

 National Safety Month – Why Safety Systems Fail Even When Procedures Exist?


Many organisations have procedures, SOPs, PTWs, and checklists — yet incidents still happen.


So the question is not, “Do we have procedures?”

The real question is: “Do our procedures reflect operational reality?”


Safety systems often fail because we focus more on compliance than culture.


Where the gap begins:

We assume: “If SOP exists, the task is safe.”

But if an SOP misses inherent risk factors—human limitations, equipment ageing, process variability, space constraints—then the SOP becomes a document, not a control.


The uncomfortable truth:

Hazards can rarely be eliminated.

We usually reduce risk to an acceptable level.


But who defines “acceptable”?

Often, it’s influenced by production targets, timelines, and profit pressure.


The most common failure pattern I see:

A plant starts at design intent (say 1.0 ton capacity).

Then comes “small” expansion: more shifts, higher throughput, stretched equipment, tighter layouts.

Not always new machines — just more load on the same system.


What changes in reality:

Equipment runs beyond intended duty cycle

Maintenance demand increases (wear, fatigue, overheating, vibration)

Space gets cluttered (reduced access/egress, higher congestion risk)

Temporary fixes become permanent


The “safe procedure” stays the same — while the plant has changed


The result?

A system that looks compliant on paper, but is operationally misaligned.


The leadership move:

Don’t force work through outdated assumptions.


Make informed decisions by evaluating:

Design intent vs current operating envelope

Capacity creep and constraints

Layout and access degradation

Equipment reliability and failure modes


What the data is “speaking back” through breakdowns, near-misses, deviations


>>> Procedures are necessary — but they are not sufficient.

>>> Safety culture means revisiting the system as the operation evolves.


Piyush Tripathi, EHS&F

HSE-RM SOLUTIONS

Your Partner In Safety…


#NationalSafetyMonth #SafetyCulture #ProcessSafety #OperationalSafety #RiskManagement #BeyondCompliance #PlantSafety #MechanicalIntegrity #EHSLeadership #YourPartnerInSafety


https://www.linkedin.com/posts/piyush-tripathi-1b219717_nationalsafetymonth-safetyculture-processsafety-activity-7435140179239264256-3YhX?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_desktop&rcm=ACoAAANohVYBP05nbH0B30UsIB9eDfH5h5j9-Wc


https://youtu.be/d182MDTJlDI

Understanding PPE at Construction Sites – Explainer Video

 Understanding PPE at Construction Sites – Explainer Video https://youtu.be/4wLU-n9ToZM   Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) plays a ...