- Properly maintaining equipment that can produce carbon monoxide
- Installing a ventilation system to remove carbon monoxide from workspaces
- Using equipment that is run by electricity of batteries instead of gas
- Giving employees personal carbon monoxide monitors
- Regularly testing the air
- Educating workers about the conditions that cause carbon monoxide poisoning
The dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning on the job
Carbon monoxide poisoning is a hidden risk in a variety of Texas workplaces.
Employees can be exposed to high, and harmful, levels in places such as warehouses, boiler rooms, petroleum refineries and blast furnaces. Carbon monoxide poisoning can affect everyone from a firefighter to a garage mechanic to a forklift operator to a customs inspector to a diesel-engine operator.
Carbon monoxide, if breathed in, can cause the brain, heart and other vital organs to become oxygen-starved. If the amount is high enough, someone can pass out in just minutes and suffocate. The first symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning could include a sudden onset of fatigue, dizziness, headache or nausea. If a victim is caught in time, carbon monoxide poisoning can be reversed.
There are steps employers can take to help prevent carbon monoxide poisoning. They include: