Hazard DRRM Jsa
Hazard DRRM Jsa
Hazard DRRM Jsa
OBJECTIVES
LEARNING CONTENT
A hazard is a process, phenomenon, or human action that can cause death, injury, or other
adverse health consequences, damage to property, social and economic disruption, or
environmental degradation. Natural, anthropogenic, or sociocultural hazards could all occur.
(UNDRR, 2021).
Natural (or physical) phenomena are only classified as hazards if they can cause actual harm,
property damage, or social and economic disruption. Natural risks are essentially determined by
biological processes such as the movement of tectonic plates, the effect of weather systems, and
the presence of streams and slopes (e.g., that might generate landslides). Yet, factors such as
urbanization, environmental degradation, and climate change can all impact the location,
occurrence (frequency), and severity of natural disasters. They are referred to as risk drivers.
DIFFERENT TYPES OF HAZARD
a. Safety hazards are the most frequent and will be present in most workplaces at a particular time.
These include unsafe conditions that can result in harm, injury, and death.
Safety Hazards include:
Spills on the floor, as well as tripping hazards such as blocked passageways or wires running
across the floor
Working at heights such as ladders, scaffolds, rooftops, or any elevated workplace
3 Unguarded equipment and moving machinery components; guards that have been removed or
moving parts that a worker may come into contact with
4 Electrical risks such as frayed wires, missing ground connections, and incorrect wiring
Restricted areas
Machinery dangers (lockout/tag-out, boiler safety, forklifts, etc.)
b. Biological hazards (biohazards) are defined as "microorganisms and other plant or animal
carriers that might induce unfavorable health consequences in employees" (EU-OSHA, 2019, p.
16). The diversity and variety of their genomes, the illnesses they may cause, and the fact that they
can be found in every known habitat impact a broad spectrum of hosts ranging from plants to
animals to people.
Source; https://safetyculture.com/topics/workplace-hazards/biological-hazard-examples
Individuals may be
exposed to the following:
Fungi/mold
Bacteria and viruses
Plants
Insect bites Source: https://news.northeastern.edu/2021/12/13/virus-evolution
Source: https://www.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/ess05.sci.ess.earthsys.volcanerupt/volcanic-eruptions-and-hazards/
d. Hydrometeorological hazards
Any atmospheric, hydrological, or oceanographic process may cause loss of life, injury or health impacts,
property damage to livelihood and social services, social and economic disruption, and environmental
damage. Surges Hydrometeorological conditions may also play a role in other dangers such as landslides,
wildfires, locust plagues, epidemics, and the transport and distribution of poisonous compounds and
volcanic eruption debris is An example of a hydrometeorological hazard. (UNDRR, 2019).
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Ar-TsrrV-0
e. Chemical Hazards
Chemical compounds can take many different aspects. They can be solids, liquids, dust, vapors, gases,
fibers, mists, or fumes. The form of a chemical has a lot to do with how it enters your body and how much
harm it might inflict. A chemical can also take on new kinds. Liquid solvents, for example, can evaporate
and emit fumes that you can inhale. Sometimes chemicals are in forms that cannot be seen or touched.
A chemical hazard is any substance, regardless of its form, that has the potential to threaten people's
health or harm the environment. It is also a serious risk involved with certain chemicals, such as skin burns,
long-term severe health effects, environmental harm, fires, or explosions (SafetyCulture, 2023).
HEALTH HAZARD- an action performed by people with a frequency or intensity that increases the risk of disease or
injury, regardless of whether the person is aware of a connection between the activity and the risk of illness or injury
Genomic and Precision Medicine, 2018).
Chronic (long-term) effects might take years to appear. They are typically the
result of long-term exposure to a hazardous chemical. These effects are
frequently lengthy.
Certain substances have both acute and long-term impacts. For example,
inhaling solvent fumes may cause dizziness immediately away (an acute effect).
But still, inhaling the same fumes continuously for many years may eventually Source https://www.freepik.com/premium-photo/lab-
induce liver damage (a chronic effect). technician-with-gloves-pours-chemical-into-test-tube-
scientific-research-chemical_13223804.htm
An earthquake is a violent ground shaking produced by the breaking and shifting of rock under the earth's
surface., followed by a succession of vibrations. Earthquakes may bring down buildings, bridges, telephone
and electricity lines, flames, explosions, and landslides.
TOOLS FOR CONDUCTING DISASTER RISK ASSESSMENTS AT BOTH NATIONAL AND LOCAL
LEVELS
UNDP differentiates between two levels of risk assessments: national and local risk assessments. A national risk
assessment is a strategic risk assessment that supports the design of national DRR strategies, policies and
regulations, DRM programming, and budget allocation. A local risk assessment is an operational risk assessment for
DRR action planning, contingency planning, pre-disaster recovery planning, and proper urban planning. UNDP
provides specific methodologies and tools to conduct a multi-hazard risk assessment at national and sub-national
levels; guidance on multi-hazard urban risk assessment in major cities and impact assessment of climate change at
the national level; support to its partners on assessing the capacities of existing departments, identifying gaps,
proposing and assisting in the implementation of measures to overcome such gaps; and assisting in the formation of
community-based disaster management committees to perform risk assessments in pilot areas.
3. Capacity Assessment:
The term "capacity assessment" refers to identifying the strengths and resources available to minimize the degree of
risk or the consequences of a disaster. The resources of a community are analyzed in this stage by examining the
available strengths such as abilities, expertise, equipment, infrastructure, and so on. The availability of these
resources is then assessed to determine how quickly they can be deployed and made accessible for usage. Another
critical stage is determining how long these resources will persist and their operational integrity (ability to accomplish
activities without supervision).
Vulnerability is defined by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR Terminology,
2017) as "the characteristics and circumstances of a community, system, or asset that make it vulnerable to
the damaging effects of a hazard." (Ahmad, 2022) The above definition represents a transition in
vulnerability knowledge over the previous few decades, from a narrow idea (for example, confined to
physical resistance of engineering structures) to a more detailed and systemic approach. At the same time,
it makes no reference to the political/institutional situation. It does not consider power relations or
community heterogeneity, which are aspects considered essential and included in definitions proposed by
other authors (Cardona et al., 2012; Alexander, 2013; Birkmann et al., 2013; Wisner, 2016).
Different Types of Vulnerability
The table below identifies four types of Vulnerability: Human-social, Physical, Economic, and Environmental and their
associated direct and indirect losses. The table gives examples of the kinds of losses. The ones indicated in red are
those that are most frequently evaluated.
According to the different types of losses, Vulnerability can be defined as physical, economic, social, and environmental.
1. Physical Vulnerability: the potential for physical effect on the physical environment, also known as elements-at-
risk (EaR). The degree of loss to a particular EaR or collection of EaR caused by a natural catastrophe of a given
size indicated on a scale ranging from 0 (no damage) to 1 (complete devastation)."
2. Economic Vulnerability: the possible consequences of risks on economic assets and processes (i.e., business
disruption, Secondary outcomes include increasing poverty and job loss.
3. Social Vulnerability: the possible effects of events on groups such as the poor, single-parent households,
pregnant or lactating women, people with disabilities, children, and adults; consider public awareness of
risk, the ability of groups to cope with disasters on their own and the status of institutional structures
designed to assist them.
LEARNING ACTIVITY
Answer the following questions concisely
1) What is the difference between hazard and risk?
2) What are the health effects associated with exposure to biological hazards?
3) What are the three ways that hazardous chemicals can enter the body?
4) What is the difference between a physical and a health hazard? Explain
5) What is risk management? What factors of risk are addressed by managing risk?
ASSESSMENT TEST
1. Choose an industry or workplace (e.g., manufacturing, hairdressing salon, school, hospital, etc.)
a) b. Make a list of hazards that may be present in Schools and workplaces (e.g., slippery floors from
spilled water, uneven floors from changing floor level, etc.)
b) Enumerate and elucidate 3 or 4 hazards that occur in that workplace
c) List down ways to control the hazards
A small cleaning company specialises in providing contract cleaning services for medical
providers. A recent OH&S audit conducted internally by this company identified the following
hazards:
manual handling tasks including heavy lifting and repetitive, forceful or awkward
movements
Draft a basic risk treatment plan that indicates how you would deal with each of these risks
REFERENCES
United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction) 2017. UNDRR Terminology on Disaster Risk Reduction.
(2017), Hazard, Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030.
https://www.preventionweb.net/understanding-disaster-risk/component-risk/hazard\
https://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/hsprograms/hazard/hazard_risk.html
MJ Operations .(2022). Environmental and Health Safety University of Missouri.
https://ehs.missouri.edu/labsafety/chemical
Addressing Biohazard Safety Workplacehttps://www.creativesafetysupply.com/articles/addressing-
biohazard-safety-in-the-workplace/
https://www.osha.gov/sites/default/files/2018-12/fy11_sh-22240-11_ChemicalHazards.pdf
https://www.osha.gov/sites/default/files/2018-12/fy10_sh-20854-10_hazard_id_facilitatorguide.pdf
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/nursing-and-health-professions/health-hazard\
What is Disaster Management? – Definition, Types, And Importance - Recruitment (recruitmentdbranlu.in)
Community Risk Assessment (CRA) (sweducarebd.com)
Disaster Risk Assessment Steps, Method, and Process - Natural DRA Methodology | Monitoring and
Evaluation Studies (mnestudies.com)
https://www.cdema.org/virtuallibrary/index.php/charim-hbook/methodology/5-risk-assessment/5-3-
vulnerability#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20different%20types,social%20vulnerability%20and
%20environmental%20vulnerability.