Engineer the Hand Out of the Hazard. Eliminating pinch point exposure before the injury occurs — the foundation of modern industrial hand safety.
A pinch point hazard is any location where two objects, surfaces, materials, or components can move together and trap, crush, amputate, or injure the hand or fingers. They are present wherever movement, gravity, force, stored energy, or shifting loads exist.
The PSC 6 Hand Exposure Zonesâ„¢ framework classifies where pinch point injuries occur most frequently, helping determine the correct engineering control strategy.
Where workers manually align steel, pipes, flanges, beams, and suspended materials — highest frequency of finger crush incidents.
Where shifting loads or closing surfaces can trap the hand without warning, delivering sudden force transfer.
Where gravity, movement, force, or stored energy place the hand directly inside the danger pathway of uncontrolled energy transfer.
Where rotating or moving equipment creates entrapment hazards through cyclic mechanical action and unexpected engagement.
Understanding specific exposure scenarios allows operations teams to select the appropriate engineering control and elimination strategy.
Gloves may reduce cuts or abrasions. They cannot stop crushing force. Industrial hand safety must follow the hierarchy of controls — prioritizing physical exposure elimination over behavioral reminders.
The PSC No-Touch Frameworkâ„¢ applies a single governing principle across all industrial movement operations: if any of the following conditions exist, the hand does not belong there.
Distance creates safety. The PSC No-Touch Frameworkâ„¢ applies this principle across lifting, rigging, fabrication, material handling, alignment work, maintenance tasks, and all industrial movement operations.
The warning signs always exist before a pinch point injury occurs. The question is not whether workers understand the risk — it is whether the operation has been engineered to eliminate exposure.
The future of industrial hand safety is not better reaction time. It is engineered exposure elimination. It is no-touch operations. It is designing work so the hand never enters the hazard zone in the first place.
Access the complete PSC No-Touch Frameworkâ„¢, 6 Hand Exposure Zonesâ„¢, Line-of-Fire Assessment Matrixâ„¢, and Hand Exposure Elimination resources at Hand Safety India.
Visit Hand Safety Indiahandsafetyindia.com — PSC No-Touch Framework™ & Industrial Hand Safety Resources
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