Dear AWARE-NS Stakeholders,
As you may know, AWARE-NS was created in 2009 as a provincial not-for-profit registered society. Its mission is to work with industry stakeholders and partners to promote and improve safety and health for workers in health care and community services workplaces. The Department of Health and Wellness has commissioned an operational and stakeholder review of AWARE-NS with Stylus Consulting / Wayfinder Consulting selected as the independent consulting firm to conduct the review. The goal is to inform how to effectively provide quality programs and services to the health and community services workforce that are strategic, sustainable, accountable, and supported by the industry/sector.
Your feedback is critical. You are invited to take a few minutes to complete the following on-line survey.
There are 14 questions, and the survey can be completed in under 10 minutes. Please be sure to press the ‘Submit’ button at the end of the survey. Please note that all responses will remain confidential and individual responses will not be identifiable. The feedback received will be consolidated into an aggregate data file for purposes of analysis and interpretation.
If you wish to provide feedback beyond the survey, please contact me directly at:
email: [email protected]
phone: 902-457-2433
mobile: 902-233-2306
Thank you for participating. We value your feedback and your time, and look forward to hearing from you.
 
Susan E. Smith, BSc, MBA, FCCHL, CHSRF EXTRA Fellow
AWARE-NS Project Lead
Stylus Consulting/Wayfinder Consulting Incorporated
86 Main Avenue
Halifax, NS B3M 1A7
Canada
tel: 902.457.2433
fax: 902.443-6098
email: [email protected]
website: www.wayfinderconsulting.ca

Deadline: Friday September 13, 2013

The Nominating Committee of AWARE-NS, the Nova Scotia Health and Community Services Safety Association, is seeking nominations for the following Board positions that have become available at the Annual General Meeting, on June 20, 2013:

  • 1 District Health Authority representative;
  • 1 Community Care representative; and
  • 1 Front Line Worker representatives

Click To View Board Recruitment Notice
Click To Apply

We Want Your Opinion!
We asked Heather Matthews, OHS Specialist with AWARE-NS and Carol Rhynold, RN, BScN, RN Supervisor for Guysborough County Home Support Agency their opinion on what traits make a good Safety Manager, and the best places to obtain OHS resources in Nova Scotia. Be sure to weigh in and add your opinion to the “comments” section below this article.
What are the best characteristics in a safety professional?

  1. Knowledge/experience
  2. Good communication skills
  3. Positive attitude
  4. Integrity
  5. Persistence
  6. Patience

What are the top tools/sites you would direct a new safety professional to?

  1. Department of Labour and Advanced Education
  2. Applicable Industry Association (Construction Safety Association, Safety Services NS, COSP, etc)
  3. Safety Associations (AWARE-NS)
  4. WCB
  5. Networking with as many safety professional as you can
  6. The Canadian Center for Occupational Health and Safety (resources rich) http://www.ccohs.ca/

Chris Goudge, a Canadian Registered Safety Professional in the health care sector went on to add that “the OHS pro needs to not only have a well rounded and current knowledge of safety regulations, rules and best practices but they must also have knowledge of their workplace and the process within. The connection must be made between the OHS requirements and the process. Another important skill is their ability to build and maintain relationships. OHS pros are required to interact with people at all levels of an organization, from the front line worker to the board of directors and everyone in between. Being able to establish relationships will assist in developing credibility, increase organizational knowledge and challenges and aid in obtaining buy in for safety initiatives. Communication Skills are likely the most important skill of a successful safety professional. All of the knowledge and expertise is useless unless you can effectively share this with the people that need to know. Having the ability to adjust your language and approach depending on the audience is critical and being able to connect with staff is essential in creating a safety culture”.

Help build this resource and and post your tips in the comments section below!

The Eight P’s of Good Safety Management

  1. Passion – really believe in what you do, and be strongly committed to improving the safety culture.
  2. Patience – be prepared to answer lots of questions from those who don’t share your vision (well, not just yet).
  3. Professional – be sought by management for your input and advice, be respected for your knowledge, act as a role model, and link OHSE strategies to business (value-adding). Credibility is one of the keys to effective management. The Safety Officer needs to be someone whose advice is appreciated at all levels of the organization because it is practical and improves outcomes.
  4. Priority – act with urgency, and complete tasks.
  5. Persistence/Perseverance – challenge non-compliance, and do not let the actions of others slip by.
  6. Performance/Proactive – get things done/take action/have a go, pursue best practice, have good ideas (problem solving), and be reliable.
  7. People Person – influence behavior, be a good listener, and be an excellent communicator.
  8. Personality/Profile – be seen around the site, and have a sense of humor

What are the skills required to manage the role of Safety Officer?
The key skills are political, interpersonal, problem solving, finance, and marketing skills. Safety Officers needs to have political savvy to influence change. They need to understand the business and know who’s in a position of influence. They need to spend time in management committees, and on the floor talking to people. Good interpersonal skills can influence a change in the behavior of staff. People do what gets noticed, rewarded, and measured. They want to be managed by principles not endless rules and regulations, and they want purposes and principles that inspire them, empower them, and encourage them to do their best. Safety management is about leading people to good ideas and so a proactive not a reactive person is needed in the job. Safety Officers need to decide what behavior is needed and to encourage it by giving positive reinforcement each and every time they see that behavior exhibited. They need to structure their language, discussion, and interface with other managers in such a way that they speak their language and can explain issues in a way that motivates others in the ordinary course of business.
Influence Others
To solve problems, Safety Officers need to use the power and pervasiveness of information to make everyone aware of the problem. They need to be able to use problems to find practical solutions. They need to shift from hazard spotting, which is a negative activity, to developing positive strategies to highlight safety performance successes. They need to use their knowledge to educate and train people to view safety as a value-adding component, not as an additional problem.
Source File: http://danieljames.webs.com/

Effective June 12, 2013

Summary of recent amendments to the Occupational Safety Regulations and the newly enacted Workplace Health And Safety Regulations.
To view the full text can be found at http://gov.ns.ca/just/regulations/rxam-z.htm#ohs
 
 

Conversations and comments made by stakeholders via Twitter during our 2013 AGM. A live Twitter feed was shown during the presentation for the audience to enjoy! View full presentation on YouTube http://bit.ly/19vKgbV. Download annual report http://bit.ly/14lh9nZ.
 

Photos, news and tweets from the Health Care Human Resource Sector Council AGM & Stakeholder Showcase June 13, 2013.

Northwood Symposium on Twitter

This years line up of speakers focused on Alzheimers, flu breakouts in continuing care homes, and other research topics relating to our aging population and the healthcare associated concerns.
View 4 of the speakers on our YouTube channel!
 

CCANS Conference & Twitter Event A Success!

AWARE-NS attended the CCANS Conference in Sydney, Nova Scotia, June 5th 2013. We spent the day tweeting insightful information we learned from the speakers. AWARE-NS invited stakeholders from around the province to tune in to our Twitter feed and share in the experience. Here are a few highlights

Coming into effect June 12, 2013

Together with the introduction of the new regulation, the Occupational Safety General Regulations and Blasting Safety Regulations were amended to make them consistent with the new regulation.
The Fall Protection and Scaffolding Regulations; the Temporary Workplace Traffic Control Regulations; and the Occupational Health Regulations will be repealed.
Please review:
original legislation
new legislation that reflects the changes
summary of legislation changes