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Your Responsibility:
Make sure first-aid trained personnel are available
to provide quick and effective first aid
You must:
| Make sure
that first-aid trained personnel are available to provide quick
and effective first aid |
WAC 296-800-15005 |
| Make sure
appropriate first-aid supplies are readily available |
WAC 296-800-15020 |
| Make sure
emergency washing facilities are functional and readily accessible |
WAC 296-800-15030 |
| Inspect
and activate your emergency washing facilities |
WAC
296-800-15035 |
| Make sure
supplemental flushing equipment provides sufficient water |
WAC
296-800-15040 |
|

WAC 296-800-15005
Make sure that first-aid trained personnel are
available to provide quick and effective first aid
You must:
Comply with the first-aid training requirements of 29 CFR 1910.151(b)
which states:
"In the absence of an infirmary, clinic, or hospital in near proximity
to the workplace, which is used for the treatment of all injured employees,
a person or persons shall be adequately trained to render first-aid."
WAC 296-800-15020
Make sure appropriate first-aid supplies are readily
available
You must:
- Make sure
first-aid supplies are readily available.
- Make sure first-aid supplies at your workplace are
appropriate to:
- - Your occupational setting.
- - The response time of your emergency medical services.
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Note:
First-aid kits from your local retailer or
safety supplier should be adequate for most nonindustrial employers. |
You must:
- Make sure that first-aid supplies are:
- - Easily accessible to all your employees.
- - Stored in containers that protect them from damage,
deterioration, or contamination. Containers must be clearly marked,
not locked, and may be sealed.
- - Able to be moved to the location of an injured
or acutely ill employee.
WAC 296-800-15030
Make sure emergency washing facilities are functional
and readily accessible
You must:
- Provide an emergency shower:
- - When there is potential for major portions of an
employee's body to contact corrosives, strong irritants, or toxic
chemicals.
- - That delivers water to cascade over the user's
entire body at a minimum rate of 20 gallons (75 liters) per minute
for fifteen minutes or more.
- Provide an emergency eyewash:
- - When there is potential for an employee's eyes
to be exposed to corrosives, strong irritants, or toxic chemicals.
- - That irrigates and flushes both eyes simultaneously
while the user holds their eyes open.
- - With an on-off valve that activates in one second
or less and remains on without user assistance until intentionally
turned off.
- - That delivers at least 0.4 gallons (1.5 liters)
of water per minute for fifteen minutes or more.
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Note:
Chemicals that require emergency washing facilities:
- You can determine whether chemicals in your
workplace require emergency washing facilities by looking at the
material safety data sheet (MSDS) or similar documents.
The MSDS contains information about first-aid requirements and
emergency flushing of skin or eyes.
- For chemicals developed in the workplace, the
following resources provide information about first-aid requirements:
- - NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards
- * DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 97-140
- *
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/npg/default.html
- - Threshold Limit Values for Chemical Substances
and Physical Agents American Conference of Governmental Industrial
Hygienists (ACGIH)
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You must:
- Make sure emergency washing facilities:
- - Are located so that it takes no more than ten
seconds to reach.
- - Are kept free of obstacles blocking their use.
- - Function correctly.
- - Provide the quality and quantity of water that
is satisfactory for emergency washing purposes.
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Note:
- If water in emergency washing facilities
is allowed to freeze, they will not function correctly.
Precautions need to be taken to prevent this from happening.
- The travel distance to an emergency washing
facility should be no more than fifty feet (15.25 meters).
- For further information on the design,
installation, and maintenance of emergency washing facilities,
see American National Standards Institute (ANSI) publication
Z358.1 - 1998, Emergency Eyewash and Shower Equipment.
Emergency washing facilities that are designed to meet ANSI
Z358.1 - 1998 also meet the requirements of this standard.
The ANSI standard can be obtained from the American National
Standards Institute, 1430 Broadway, New York, New York 10018.
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Reference:
- Training in the location and use of your
emergency washing facilities is required under the employer
chemical hazard communication rule,
WAC 296-800-170, and the accident prevention program
rule, WAC 296-800-140.
- All emergency washing facilities using
"not fit for drinking" (nonpotable) water must
have signs stating the water is "not fit for drinking."
See WAC 296-800-23010.
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WAC
296-800-15035
Inspect and activate your emergency washing facilities
You must:
- Make sure all plumbed emergency washing facilities
are inspected once a year to make sure they function correctly.
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Note:
Inspections should include:
- Examination of the piping
- Making sure that water is available at
the appropriate temperature and quality
- Activation to check that the valves and
other hardware work properly
- Checking the water flow rate
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You must:
- Make sure plumbed emergency eyewashes and hand-held
drench hoses are activated weekly to check the proper functioning
of the valves, hardware and availability of water.
- Make sure all self-contained eyewash equipment and
personal eyewash units are inspected and maintained according to manufacturers
instructions.
- - Inspections to check proper operation must be
done once a year
- - Sealed personal eyewashes must be replaced after
the manufacturer's expiration date.
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Note:
Most manufacturers recommend replacing fluid
in open self-contained eyewashes every six months. The
period for sealed containers is typically two years. |
WAC
296-800-15040
Make sure supplemental flushing equipment provides
sufficient water.
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Note:
Supplemental flushing equipment cannot be
used in place of required emergency showers or eyewashes. |
You must:
- Make sure hand-held drench hoses deliver at least
3.0 gallons (11.4 liters) of water per minute for fifteen minutes
or more.
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Note:
Why use a drench hose? A drench hose
is useful when:
- The spill is small and does not require
an emergency shower
- Used with a shower for local rinsing,
particularly on the lower extremities.
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You must:
- Make sure personal eyewash equipment delivers only
clean water or other medically approved eye flushing solutions.
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