Rapid innovation in technology is impacting every corner of business operations—and workplace safety is no exception. Advances in nanotechnology, robotics, data analytics, video, and telecommunications are enabling employers to improve workplace safety in a variety of ways, such as better monitoring employees’ health, reducing physical stress, and keeping personnel out of harm’s way. In addition to protecting workers, safety technology can help boost employee morale, reduce turnover, and control business insurance costs.
Virtually any company can benefit from investments in workplace safety technology. Businesses with physically intense operations—such as construction, transportation and warehousing, and farming—may see the greatest benefits from the following four types of safety tech.
Wearable technologies are now available that can help lower the frequency and severity of injury to workers. Wearable technology falls into four categories:
Be aware that adapting some wearable technologies may raise privacy concerns with your employees.
Manufacturing robots that perform repetitive and lifting tasks have long enabled businesses to reduce workplace injuries. Now your business may be able to further improve workplace safety by assigning higher-risk tasks to sophisticated, highly mobile drones and robots.
Drones—or Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS)—can be used by businesses such as construction companies and manufacturers to minimize employees’ exposure to falls and other risks by inspecting sites and monitoring operations. Similarly, robots can access hazardous, difficult-to-reach locations—such as tunnels and storage tanks—to perform inspections and collect samples.
Smartphone apps are one of the easiest ways to leverage technology to assess, monitor, and improve workplace safety. Available apps—many of which are free— enable workers and supervisors to evaluate tasks and working conditions by, for example, measuring noise hazards, promoting ladder safety and safe lifting, and providing guidance on handling hazardous materials. Some sector-specific apps also support workplace safety by helping businesses remain compliant with occupational safety regulations.
Today, many tech vendors are already offering Virtual reality (VR) safety training programs that can enable your employees to practice using equipment and simulate working environments that pose potential risks. VR can also be used for training drills, such as fire evacuations. Looking into the future, virtual reality and augmented reality (AR) technologies may be increasingly used to simulate tasks to measure and reduce risks—before a worker starts the actual job.
When evaluating your occupational safety and workers compensation insurance options, consider more than premium costs and claims handling. A workplace injury can hurt morale and productivity, as well as generate costs associated with turnover and absenteeism. Ask your insurer about services that will help you improve workplace safety and reduce accidents in the first place. Your insurer may be able to help you identify technologies best suited to improve worker safety at your business.