Confined Space Incident 3D Re-enactment Video

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 июл 2024
  • This video is the result of a creative sentencing project in partnership with the Government of Alberta and a company that experienced an incident involving nitrogen gas in a confined space. It is designed to encourage conversations about confined spaces, their hazards and emergency response.
    Review the video at your workplace and discuss how these types of incidents could occur, what safeguards are in place and if they are sufficient to keep you safe.
    A facilitation guide and example bowtie are provided to assist you in learning from this incident.
    Learn more about Energy Safety Canada's confined space resources: www.energysafetycanada.com/St...

Комментарии • 10

  • @jfournerat1274
    @jfournerat1274 8 месяцев назад +20

    One lesson that was learned from this incident is if you see someone unconscious in a confined space like the one in this incident unless you have proper training and equipment such as breathing apparatus or masks to safely go in the space and preform a rescue you should never enter the space even if your instincts tell you to go in and help them. Instead immediately call 911 and then immediately attempt to get people nearby who are properly trained and equipped to preform a rescue safely That is because you probably don’t know what caused the person to become unconscious and it is very possible that there is a poisonous gas or a lack of oxygen in the confined space and if you go in without training or equipment then you will be overcome as well. Tragically 60% percent of people who die in confined spaces are would be rescuers who like the ones in this incident entered the space in a attempt to rescue people who were unconscious but because they didn’t have any proper training or equipment to preform a rescue they became overcome as well.

    • @LeoPlaysYT
      @LeoPlaysYT 4 месяца назад

      The lesson from this should be to teach more about what your work is about and how your work works. That's the lesson because people can be unconscious in a confined space but if you cannot detect the problem because of lack of knowledge how the fk are you suppose to know for next time, next time they won't be unconscious it will be something else.

    • @ponponpatapon9670
      @ponponpatapon9670 3 месяца назад +1

      @@LeoPlaysYT no one was arguing otherwise, LeoPlaysYT. of course OP meant teaching this to other people in the future - OP is using the generic version of "you".

    • @sabir4094
      @sabir4094 Месяц назад +1

      The employer failed to create a rescue plan and train they employees too.

  • @HWill-ol9lg
    @HWill-ol9lg 6 месяцев назад +1

    One of the best videos. 2023

  • @LeoPlaysYT
    @LeoPlaysYT 4 месяца назад +7

    What we can learn from this is that companies don't give a fk if their workers die. Here's my idea if a worker dies on a job site it should be the boss that takes the blame and to go to jail if his lawyer isn't good enough. Now you may thing that it's a stupid way to think but in reality the boss should make sure EVERY SINGLE ONE of his people working on HIS property should know EVERYTHING about how things work and they should be paid MORE and have less people working but the 10 people that knows everything is better than 100 people running around headless.

  • @Manikandan_31
    @Manikandan_31 5 месяцев назад +1

    Do more videos like this

  • @TheeSlickShady_Dave_K
    @TheeSlickShady_Dave_K 5 месяцев назад

    Liked and subbed

  • @lenrussell2424
    @lenrussell2424 Месяц назад +1

    "Can you tell me any more information?"
    Yeah, he's panicking, asking a question that open ended is not going to get you anything useful unless he's been given special training. Instead, a 911 operator should ask specific questions, like "how many people?" "Where are they/you?" "What is your address?" "Are the victims awake/responsive?" Even "can you tell me what happened" would potentially be more helpful.

    • @aviay
      @aviay 2 дня назад

      Good thing it isn't a real call then bud. You should rewatch the first 15 seconds and read the words on the screen.