Hearing Conservation Training
OSHA 1910.95
Hearing Conservation is the OSHA standard that protects you from sound
levels that can harm your hearing. Noise is a fact of life we cannot ignore. Noise can damage your hearing
permanently, that's why it's important to protect your hearing.
Awareness of the hazard is the first step
toward preventing a recordable injury and an injury to your hearing is serious business.
The Hearing Conservation standard clearly
states that hearing protectors are required when the noise level reaches 85db to 90db or more and you are
exposed to for an 8-hour time weighted average.
You make the decibel determination by
measuring the noise with a sound level meter. You can also use a crude rule of thumb measurement: if you have to
raise your voice to talk to people standing about 3 feet away, you should wear hearing
protection.
Pulse America’s Hearing Conservation
Training program teaches your employees the long term effect of noise, how to pick and choose hearing
protection, how the human ear works and how the audiometric test works and the purpose of it. This program meets
OSHA’s Hearing Conservation standard 29 CFR 1910.95.
OSHA Standard 1910.95
1910.95(b)(1)
When employees are subjected to sound
exceeding 85 db, feasible administrative or engineering controls shall be utilized. If such controls fail to
reduce sound levels sufficiently, personal protective equipment shall be provided and used to reduce sound
levels within the levels of the table.
1910.95(k)
"Training program."
1910.95(k)(1)
The employer shall institute a training
program for all employees who are exposed to noise at or above an 8-hour time-weighted average of 85 decibels,
and shall ensure employee participation in such program.
1910.95(k)(2)
The training program shall be repeated
annually for each employee included in the hearing conservation program. Information provided in the training
program shall be updated to be consistent with changes in protective equipment and work
processes.
1910.95(k)(3)
The employer shall ensure that each
employee is informed of the following:
1910.95(k)(3)(i)
The effects of noise on
hearing;
1910.95(k)(3)(ii)
The purpose of hearing protectors, the
advantages, disadvantages, and attenuation of various types, and instructions on selection, fitting, use, and
care; and
1910.95(k)(3)(iii)
The purpose of audiometric testing, and an
explanation of the test procedures.
1910.95(l)
"Access to information and training
materials."
|