Engineering workers out of hazardous energy paths through exclusion zones, no-touch operations, stand-off distance methodologies, and exposure elimination frameworks.
A struck-by hazard line of fire exposure occurs when workers position themselves inside the movement path of hazardous energy — moving equipment, suspended loads, falling objects, rotating components, or uncontrolled industrial force.
"Any location where a worker can be struck by, caught between, crushed by, or exposed to moving energy."
PSC™ operational doctrine reinforces that struck-by incidents are not fundamentally PPE failures — they are workflow-design failures.
Once hazardous movement begins, human reaction capability is no longer the controlling force. Hazardous energy is.
Common Hazard Sources
"If exposure is operationally required, the process has not yet been engineered."
PSC™ Operational PhilosophyPSC™ methodology identifies five repeatable operational states in which struck-by incidents occur.
Workers position themselves directly inside suspended load paths, equipment travel paths, crane swing radius, falling object zones, or moving material trajectories.
Workers attempt to stabilize, guide, align, retrieve, or manually correct unstable movement. PSC™ analysis consistently shows: intervention creates exposure.
Workers remain too close to moving equipment, rotating systems, unstable loads, mobile machinery, and shifting materials. Distance decreases. Exposure increases.
Stored or unstable energy releases suddenly through load shift, movement change, mechanical failure, pressure release, or unstable positioning.
The workflow itself requires workers to enter hazard zones, position near moving energy, guide loads manually, or interact with unstable systems.
Unlike PPE, engineering controls do not depend on reaction time, worker awareness, behavioral compliance, or procedural memory.
"The safest hand is the one that was never there."
Modern industrial safety increasingly focuses on eliminating exposure completely out of the workflow itself — not managing it.
Control Systems
Restrict worker access around moving loads, overhead lifting, and hazardous movement areas.
Reduce manual interaction during suspended load alignment and placement.
Maintain engineered stand-off distance from pinch points, crush zones, and hazardous movement paths.
Allow workers to control or retrieve materials without entering active hazard zones.
Create engineered separation between workers and hazardous moving energy.
PSC™ strongly aligns struck-by prevention with the Hierarchy of Controls, always prioritizing engineered solutions above behavioral ones.
"PPE is the last line of defence — not the strategy."
| Elimination | Remove the hazard from the process entirely. Highest priority. |
| Substitution | Replace the hazardous activity with a safer equivalent process. |
| Engineering Controls | Exclusion systems, remote handling, hands-free positioning, hazardous energy separation. |
| Administrative Controls | SOPs, lift plans, hazard assessments, safety audits, and equipment movement procedures. |
| PPE | Last line of defence. Reduces injury severity after exposure occurs — does not eliminate it. |
A structured five-step operational process for systematically engineering workers out of hazardous energy paths before work begins — not after incidents occur.
"If the hand is still required, the task is not engineered."
Map every task involving moving equipment, suspended loads, rotating systems, or overhead operations.
Identify swing radius, fall paths, impact zones, equipment travel paths, pinch points, and secondary strike areas.
Workers remain outside active hazard zones. Distance is not precaution — distance is the control system.
Deploy exclusion zones, hands-free tools, push-pull systems, remote handling, and barrier separation.
Integrate struck-by prevention into lift plans, SOPs, hazard assessments, and equipment movement procedures.
These industrial environments involve continuous exposure to hazardous moving energy and struck-by risks.
A struck by hazard line of fire exposure occurs when workers enter the movement path of hazardous energy, moving equipment, suspended loads, or falling objects. It represents any situation where uncontrolled industrial force can contact, crush, or destabilize a worker's body.
Struck-by hazards involve uncontrolled energy transfer, moving equipment, falling materials, and impact force that can cause catastrophic injuries instantly. Energy transfer happens faster than human reaction capability — making PPE and awareness-only strategies insufficient as primary controls.
Oil & gas, construction, mining, manufacturing, ports, steel, and heavy engineering industries commonly experience struck-by hazards due to continuous exposure to moving equipment, suspended loads, overhead operations, and hazardous material handling.
Hands-free systems eliminate direct worker interaction with hazardous movement paths and maintain engineered stand-off distance from active energy zones. They allow positioning, guidance, and retrieval without placing the worker's body inside the hazardous movement path.
PPE only reduces injury severity after impact occurs. It cannot stop moving load impact force, falling object momentum, equipment strike force, swing radius exposure, or vehicle movement hazards. Engineering controls help eliminate worker exposure before incidents happen — addressing root cause rather than consequence.
Explore industrial hand safety solutions, no-touch operation systems, and struck-by hazard prevention resources at Hand Safety India.
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