Development, begins together.
Banner alanı
IFM Sensor

Industrial Fields to All Workplaces: The Broadening of the Definition of Risk in Occupational Health and Safety

Ahmet Ö.

Corporate
  • EMS Engineer
  • 1776967423404-industrial-safety-feature-april-20-2026-web.png

    ## A New Era in Occupational Health and Safety Risk Definition

    Traditionally, occupational health and safety was evaluated as being limited to factories and industrial facilities, but today these boundaries are rapidly expanding. Environmental risks and human injuries are now considered equally important; risks are no longer confined to factory floors but are spreading to different workplaces such as retail stores and customer interaction areas.

    ### The Impact of Environmental Risks on Occupational Health

    For many years, workplace safety was measured based on human injuries. Classic risks such as falls, collisions, and equipment failures were prominent. However, environmental risks are now considered important indicators that predict human injuries and lead to financial losses. For example, temperature deviations in the cold chain of the pharmaceutical sector cause serious product losses, while also potentially endangering the health of employees. In the food sector, a lack of environmental control brings with it human health risks and significant economic damages.

    ### The Spread of Safety Risk from Industrial Areas to All Workplaces

    Safety risks are no longer limited to storage and production facilities. Markets, stores, and pharmacies are also emerging as high-risk workplaces. Dangers such as heavy lifting, working in narrow corridors, and working at heights share extremely similar characteristics. However, safety measures are often not fully implemented in these places.

    • In the market sector, 78,200 worker injuries were recorded in 2023.
    • Consumer losses (e.g., falls) have increased exponentially in recent years, with an average lawsuit cost of $45,000 projected for 2025.

    ### The New Safety Approach and Its Future

    Occupational health and safety is now addressed not only with industrial risks but with a combination of human and environmental risks. This necessitates continuous monitoring and risk management in broader work environments such as stores and customer areas. Organizations must expand their occupational safety infrastructures and focus on ensuring both employee and customer safety simultaneously.

    • Real-time monitoring of environmental conditions
    • Use of data analytics for early risk detection
    • Development of a broad sectoral safety infrastructure

    These developments make occupational safety management a priority not just for certain high-risk areas, but for all workplaces. Employers must develop strategies that both protect human health and ensure the economic sustainability of businesses within this scope.

    ---

    This transformation in the field of industry and occupational safety is reshaping the perception of risk in work environments and leading to significant changes in technological and legal regulations. Occupational health and safety management has now become a more comprehensive, proactive, and integrated discipline.
     
    Back
    Top