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Hello, Guest!

  • Home
  • All Topics
  • Resources
    • OSHA Program Wizards
      • Emergency Action Plan
      • Transitional Work Program
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • Energy Control (LOTO)
      • Hazard Communication (HAZCOM)
      • Confined Space Program
      • Hearing Conservation Program
      • Ergonomics Program
      • More…
    • Program Audits
      • Confined Space
      • Emergency Planning
      • Employee Training
      • Hazard Recognition and Control
      • Hearing Conservation
      • IIPP
      • Lockout Tagout
      • Personal Protective Equipment
      • More…
    • Major Loss Source Assessment Tools
      • Amputation
      • Falls from Elevation – Construction
      • Falls from Elevation – Extension Ladders
      • Falls from Elevation – Orchard Ladder
      • Falls from Elevation – Stepladders
      • Lifting Below the Knees
      • Lifting With Arms Extended
      • More…
    • Supervisor Resources
      • California SB 553 Workplace Violence Prevention
      • New York Workplace Violence Prevention
      • Employer’s Guide HazCom
      • Employer’s Guide Lockout Tagout
      • 2026 OSHA Outreach 10 Hour Virtual Training Course
      • Forklift Train the Trainer
      • Train the Trainer
      • Business Case for Safety
      • Special Reports
      • Newsletters
      • Incident Investigations
    • Training Calendars and Bundles
      • ICW Ladder Elimination Challenge
      • Quarterly Safety Checkup
      • Training Calendars by Industry
      • Essential 29
      • Landscaping Safety
      • Fundamental 55
      • Tree Trimming
      • Towing Bundle
    • Training Engagement and Retention
      • Picture This
      • Stats and Facts
      • Fatality Reports
      • Puzzles and Games
      • Safety Checklists
    • Webinars
      • Work Comp Fraud: The Modern Fraudster
      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • More…
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      • If You’ve Been Injured
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      • Top 10 Tips to Lower Your Ex-Mod
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      • Returning to the Workplace During COVID-19
      • Breathe Easier With These Respiratory Protection Must Haves
      • Beat the Heat: Outdoors
      • Beat the Heat: Indoors
      • Machine Guarding: 7 Questions Everyone Should Ask
      • 5 Tips for Impactful Safety Observations
      • More…
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Fatigue at Work Can Kill You
Fatigue at Work Can Kill You
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What’s at Stake?

You’re an accident waiting to happen if you are not alert at work. This applies to most high-risk jobs, trucking and transport jobs, repetitive jobs, such as sorting logs in a lumber mill, and a host of other jobs – regardless of the inherent risk level.

What’s the Danger?

The risk of making mistakes at work increases dramatically if workers sleep for less than seven to eight hours or are awake for more than 17 consecutive hours.

  • Fatigue reduces your ability to make decisions and to do complex planning.
  • Communication skills and your ability to respond to and remember directions and recall details also suffer.
  • Fatigue slows your reaction time, and your ability to respond to changes in surroundings or information provided.
  • It also shortens your attention span, especially during boring or mundane tasks.
  • Fatigue lowers your productivity and performance and your ability to handle stress.
  • It makes it hard to stay awake, increases forgetfulness and increases errors in judgment.

Experiencing one or more of these factors can make you dangerous to work with, because it increases the chances for incidents and injuries. 

How to Protect Yourself

One of the most important ways to protect against fatigue is to get enough rest. For most people that means seven to eight hours of sleep per night.

Try these tips for getting a good night’s sleep:

  1. Go to bed and get up at the same time every day, even on weekends.
  2. Don’t eat too close to bedtime, as doing so can cause heartburn and just generally make it hard to fall asleep. Do eat a balanced diet of fruits, veggies, healthy fats, proteins and whole grains.
  3. Turn off your cell phone or tablet at least one hour before you go to sleep and don’t watch TV in bed.
  4. Exercise regularly, but not too close to bed time. Exercising an hour or so before bed can make it hard to fall asleep.
  5. Avoid caffeine, tobacco and alcohol before bed as well. Stay away from foods and drinks that contain caffeine for at least five hours before bedtime.
  6. Keep your room dark and cool. Most of us sleep better in a cooler room.
  7. If you can’t sleep, get up and go into another room and read or perform some other quiet activity that doesn’t involve staring at a screen until you feel sleepy.

At work, remember these fatigue-triggering factors and try to avoid them:

  1. Dim lighting.
  2. High temperatures, high noise, and high comfort, such as sitting for long periods in a very comfortable chair.
  3. Repetitive, long, boring and monotonous tasks.

Try these tips for staying alert:

  1. If you can, take breaks or break up tasks and keep the lights bright.
  2. On longer breaks or lunch time go for a run, bicycle ride or brisk walk in every kind of weather.
  3. Perform the most boring tasks at the start of your shift if permitted.
  4. Eat light, healthy snacks throughout your shift instead of heavy, fatty snacks.
  5. If you’re driving, be sure to take breaks at least every few hours and change drivers if you can.

Final Word

Fatigue at work doesn’t have to turn into a nightmare of injuries and accidents. Take care of yourself by getting enough sleep, eating right and knowing the factors that trigger fatigue.

 

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Upcoming Events & Webinars

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Nov 29 – What to Expect From a Health & Safety Inspection
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Dec 5 – Top Safety Issues During the Holiday Season
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