
Episode 95 - Job Hazard Analysis (JHA)
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast
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Show Notes
Episode 95 lays the foundation for understanding what a Job Hazard Analysis truly is, why it matters, and how safety leaders can use it as a practical, risk‑reducing tool rather than a compliance checkbox. Dr. Ayers focuses on the mindset behind JHAs and the core elements that make them effective.
Core MessageA JHA is a risk‑focused, step‑by‑step breakdown of a job that identifies hazards and assigns controls. Its purpose is simple: reduce exposure before work begins.
Key Points from the Episode 1. What a JHA Actually DoesA JHA:
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Breaks a job into logical steps
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Identifies hazards in each step
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Assigns controls to reduce or eliminate those hazards
It’s a structured way to think about risk.
2. JHAs Must Reflect Real Work, Not Paper WorkDr. Ayers stresses that JHAs must be based on:
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Observing the job
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Talking with the workers who perform it
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Capturing informal practices and real workflow
A JHA that only reflects the written procedure misses real hazards.
3. The Three Core Components of a JHAa. Job Steps Clear, simple, sequential steps that describe how the work is actually done.
b. Hazards All potential sources of harm, including:
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Chemical
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Physical
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Mechanical
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Ergonomic
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Environmental
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Behavioral
c. Controls Actions or protections that reduce risk, such as:
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Engineering controls
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Administrative controls
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PPE
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Training
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Work practices
Controls must match the hazard type.
4. Why JHAs Fail in Many OrganizationsCommon issues include:
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Too much detail or too little
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Copy‑and‑paste templates
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No worker involvement
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Outdated steps
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Controls that don’t match real hazards
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JHAs created only for compliance audits
A JHA must be practical, accurate, and used.
5. JHAs Are Living DocumentsThey must be updated when:
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Equipment changes
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Procedures change
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New hazards are identified
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Incidents or near misses occur
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Workers find better ways to perform tasks
A static JHA becomes irrelevant quickly.
6. The Real Purpose: Risk ReductionDr. Ayers emphasizes that the goal is not paperwork—it’s preventing injuries. A strong JHA:
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Improves hazard awareness
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Guides training
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Supports pre‑job briefings
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Helps supervisors coach effectively
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Reduces serious injury potential
It’s a tool for safer work, not a form to file.
Practical TakeawayA JHA is a simple but powerful tool: break the job into steps, identify the hazards, and apply controls that workers can actually use. When done well, it becomes the backbone of proactive risk management.