2021 Laboratory Safety Awards & Innovations Event Winners

 

Awards were given to labs, departments, and personnel in recognition of their achievements in safety culture.

The 2021 award winners for Top Dawgs in Safety:

  • Burke Museum
  • Department of Pharmacy
  • Center for Industrial and Medical Ultrasound
  • Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Department of Allergy & Infectious Disease
  • Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology

The 2021 award winners for Pack Leaders in Safety:

National Biosafety Month 2021: Wear a Lab Coat to Protect Yourself

 

 

October is National Biosafety Month, a time to focus on your lab’s biosafety policies and procedures. For 2021, EH&S would like labs to focus on the importance of wearing lab coats. Lab coats are an important barrier between your skin or clothes and any hazards that you work with in the lab. Not only do lab coats protect you from exposure, they also help prevent you from transporting laboratory contamination home to your family, friends and pets.

Select the correct PPE to protect against eye hazards

 

Several recent incidents have occurred at the University in which a chemical or infectious material splashed or splattered into the eye because the individual was not wearing the correct type of eye protection for the hazards they faced, or not wearing eye protection at all. You should always evaluate your workplace for potential eye hazards so you can select the appropriate safety equipment.

Eyeglasses versus safety glasses or goggles

Protect wildlife habitat by preventing pollution in campus stormwater

 

Stormwater drains on the UW campuses empty directly into local waterways, which can carry pollution that harms wildlife, such as birds and fish. Campus activities can put the surrounding natural areas at risk when garbage, oils, chemicals and other potentially harmful substances are allowed to flow into stormwater drains.

stormwater drain
Stormwater drain on a UW campus

Tips for completing the Animal Use Medical Screening form

 

University faculty, staff, and students must complete an animal use health screening prior to work in any University animal care and use environment to evaluate and address potential health risks related to working with research animals.

You can help speed up the health screening process by following these tips when completing the online Animal Use Medical Screening (AUMS) form:

1. Verify your contact Information.