Tennis: Wet surface risk of stepping in a puddle and straining a muscle and damaging the inside of your leg.
Weight lifting: Lifting too many weights and damaging your muscle or break bones.
Grand National horse riding:If you're halfway around the track and the horse goes out of control and runs towards the crowd and causes death.
Football: If you go for a tackle you do risk some possible injury of yourself and the other person you are tackling.
Rugby: has some of the same risk's as football but you are less protected from injury.
Boxing: If you catch someone in the right place their face you could knock them out or even break their jaw.
1. you could get badly hurt 2. you could get for the rest of your life. 3. you could get kicked off the team 4. you could not make the team 5. you might not have any time for some thing else like work 6. you could be lazy 1. you could get badly hurt 2. you could get for the rest of your life. 3. you could get kicked off the team 4. you could not make the team 5. you might not have any time for some thing else like work 6. you could be lazy
anything an hazard
the risks of rugby is if you dont play on a well maintained field it could lead to an injury
In this environment you would have things like fire hazards and risks of inhalation.
Risks and hazards are events or objects that put the health and welfare of people in danger. A hazard is an intrinsic property of an object, system or substance to cause damage or harm. Risk is the chance of an event bringing that damage or harm.
False. Chemical hazards can include both potential health hazards as well as physical hazards such as fire or explosion risks. It is important to consider all aspects of a chemical's properties when assessing its potential risks.
Each employer has its own procedures for reporting health or safety hazards.
Elimination of all risks and hazards
Some of the risks include electrocution, burn hazards, falling hazards (example:you are putting in conduit in the ceiling of a tall building), some heavy lifting/pulling, etc.
to asses risks and note down injurys or hazards that have been noticed or have happened
CRM stands for Composite Risk Management Process. The principles of CRM are to identify hazards to the force, assess hazards to determine risks, develop controls and make risk decisions, implement controls that eliminate the hazards or reduce their risks, and supervise and evaluate.
Spills and fires are the major hazards associated with most workplace storage facilities.
Implement controls