As an employer, you're required by law to protect your employees, and others, from harm. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, the minimum you must do is:
However, nothing stays the same for ever. Your manual handling risk assessment should be reviewed regularly to ensure that the risk of staff being harmed has not changed and that no further control measures are needed. It should also be reviewed if any changes occur in your business that may increase the risk of harm.
There is no legal time frame for when you should review your risk assessment. It is at your discretion to decide when a review is deemed necessary, but risk assessments are a working document and, as your business experiences change, this information should be recorded and updated. As a guide, it is recommended that risk assessments be reviewed on an annual basis.
You must review the controls you have put in place to make sure they are working. You should also review them if:
Also consider a review if your workers have spotted any problems or there have been any accidents or near misses.
As each organisations structure and risk profile is different, each organisation will need to decide on the frequency of the assessments completed, below are example approaches that could be adopted to manage manual handling risks.
We recommend setting up a separate follow up review assessment to reassess the tasks that have a high risk and/or that had substantial control measures put in place. These assessments will act as a review of control measures and identify if additional control measures are required to reduce the risks further.
You can add the names of up to 10 assessors, this allows you to filter and provide a consolidated report specifically for all the tasks an assessor has completed.
Where there has been a significant change that may increase the risk of harm, tasks should be reassessed. We recommend setting assessments up on an ad hoc basis, e.g. a warehouse operation has moved to a new location.
Some high manual handling risk organisations may opt to regular assessments on a quarterly or monthly basis as part of a continual monitoring programme.
The premium tool supports the name of assessments and folder structure to enable you to store and access completed assessment reports easily.