Marta,
A couple of different ways to consider:
I used to teach a course called "Biology and Occupational Hygiene" (later it was changed to "Biology for Environmental Engineers," a required course for that major). I would focus my safety discussions around organ systems. I.e. give the anatomy and physiology of the skin and then talk about occupational skin diseases. I'd do the same for the respiratory system, eyes and ears, etc.
In that class I also threw in topics such as the radium girls stories. LSI's "what not to do in the lab" cartoon, and an exercise on hazard mitigation.
More recently, I've put together a power point for graduate students (easily understandable by undergrads) for a Responsible Conduct of Research course. This year I reorganized it to model after ACS's "RAMP(P)"
Recognize the hazards - where are the located, LSI's "Life's nine hazards"
Assess the risks - Hazard analysis, ACS's hazard assessments
Mitigate the hazards - my interactive activity identifying and ranking the hierarchy of controls (Elimination, substitution, engineering controls, administrative controls, PPE), a PPE discussion based on Schroder, et al 2016, a real-life example of miscalculating the risks (splash of concentrated NaOH from a pipette),
Preparing for Emergencies- incident reports, incidents at institutions (methylmercury, Texas Tech, UCLA, Hawaii, Yale, Univ of Fl). BLS.gov causes of fatalities on the job,
The last "P" Protecting the environment (the for "L's" of hazardous waste (Labels, Lids, Leaks, Location),
I close with Safety Culture from APLU and what is wrong with this picture (Nature) (I'd both QC and safety issues)
Jeff
Dear All:
I am collaborating with my colleagues from the Office of Undergraduate Programs and we would like to ask the community to help us to brainstorm safety topics that we should highlight in resources/ communications with the undergraduate students.
We already know that we must make these communications engaging and accessible so we will be looking at different formats ( articles, infographics, short tidbits and so on). We would greatly appreciate you sharing with us your ideas.
Marta
Marta U. Gmurczyk, Ph.D.
Safety Programs Manager| Scientific Advancement Division
1155 16th St., NW | Washington | DC 20036
T 202-452-2105 | F 202-872-8068
http://www.acs.org/" target="_blank">www.acs.org
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ACS Chemistry for Life
American Chemical Society
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