Hi
Safety is a huge subject that has several interpretations depending on whether you are in the regulatory bodies, legal side, engineering or just joe public but from an engineering perspective you cannot say to any official, sorry they lost a limb due to an accident, there will be a reason and someone will be responsible even if it is the limbless person. It is unfortunate that many people believe that accidents are just due to bad luck or an unfortunate chance but the vast majority of injuries that occur at work and elsewhere are completely preventable and is the mindset that people need to adopt. It is a shame that HSE does not cover all machinery whether a place of employment or home workshop. Another issue with the home workshop is that all safety is down to yourself, there is no one else to yell at you if you try and do something stupid. With a clear safety mindset you do not just do something in your workshop, you go through a mental process of is what I am about to do likely to result in injury, ie because the light levels are poor, the work area is cluttered, I had a late night, and am I wearing suitable PPE.
Simple analogy I was taught in safety courses was that if you are walking down the road and you get cremated by a lightening strike then that is an accident but if you are on a golf course playing golf and get cremated then it is not an accident because you cannot do anything about the lightening strike but you did not have to be on that golf course during a storm waving a golf club around, and so is your fault.
Safety is a huge subject that has several interpretations depending on whether you are in the regulatory bodies, legal side, engineering or just joe public but from an engineering perspective you cannot say to any official, sorry they lost a limb due to an accident, there will be a reason and someone will be responsible even if it is the limbless person. It is unfortunate that many people believe that accidents are just due to bad luck or an unfortunate chance but the vast majority of injuries that occur at work and elsewhere are completely preventable and is the mindset that people need to adopt. It is a shame that HSE does not cover all machinery whether a place of employment or home workshop. Another issue with the home workshop is that all safety is down to yourself, there is no one else to yell at you if you try and do something stupid. With a clear safety mindset you do not just do something in your workshop, you go through a mental process of is what I am about to do likely to result in injury, ie because the light levels are poor, the work area is cluttered, I had a late night, and am I wearing suitable PPE.
Simple analogy I was taught in safety courses was that if you are walking down the road and you get cremated by a lightening strike then that is an accident but if you are on a golf course playing golf and get cremated then it is not an accident because you cannot do anything about the lightening strike but you did not have to be on that golf course during a storm waving a golf club around, and so is your fault.