In researching eye injuries at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, their logo is “Use Them or Lose Them”, picturing a person with safety glasses on. Thousands are blinded each year from work-related injuries that could have been prevented with proper use of eye and face protection. More than $300 million per year in lost production time, medical expenses and worker compensation are due to eye injuries alone. Each day, over 2,000 U.S. workers have job-related eye injuries that require medical treatment. Safety glasses, goggles, face shields, and welding hoods, and full-face respirators must meet ANSI Z87.1 standards. The frame of safety glasses must have Z87 or Z87+ on the frame. Anytime workers face hazards of flying particles or objects, they are required to have side protection or side shields on glasses. Those who work in health care, janitorial, construction, laboratory staffs, construction, and welding, risk permanent damage to their eyes if they do not wear the proper PPE for face and eyes. Employers must determine the types of hazards that are present before assigning PPE to workers. Side shields come in a variety of styles that will fit just about any shape of safety glass, and are used widely among many professions. They are a great safety convenience, as they slip on and off safety glasses, but give the added security of side protection. Wrap around glasses also furnish protection from wind, flying particles, dust, and much more. Eye injuries occur because of inadequate side protection, proper fit, or particles that fell from above, such as drilling or hammering overhead. What have you observed at your work site? How many workers are wearing any type of eye protection? And do they keep it on all day? A very common response after the fact of an eye injury is “I didn’t think I needed it.” With all the wonderful features that safety glasses boast, there’s just no excuse for not wearing eye protection! There are safety glasses available for all kinds of work that are stylish and have features, such as fitting over regular prescription glasses, numerous tints, even ones with bifocal lenses. The next time you need a pair of sunglasses, check out the cool new styles of safety glasses. They look great, cost less, and furnish much more protection. You’ll be stylin’ with your new safety glasses on the job, working around the house, or at play.
If you wear contacts, you need to wear safety glasses for additional eye protection, too. If you wear glasses you need to either have prescription safety glasses that meet ANSI standards or wear over-sized safety glasses over your regular glasses. If you wear over-sized safety glasses over your regular glasses they need to fit right so you can still see.
Sources: OSHA NIOSH
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