To calculate man hours after an accident, first, determine the total number of workers involved and the duration of their absence due to the incident. Multiply the number of employees by the number of hours each individual missed work. Additionally, consider any time spent on investigations or safety meetings related to the accident to get a comprehensive view of the total man hours affected. This total can help in assessing productivity losses and the impact of the incident on operations.
No. of Accident*(Ref.Value)/(total working man-hours)Ref. Value=100 (Number of worker) * 45 (number of working hours per week) * 50 (number of working weeks a year)Result = 225 000if you accept number of working hours per week=40result will be = 200 000
no of trainees X no of hours spent in training
To calculate total working man hours, multiply the number of workers by the number of hours each worker contributes over a specific period. For example, if you have 10 workers each working 40 hours a week, the total working man hours for that week would be 10 workers x 40 hours = 400 man hours. If you want to calculate for multiple weeks, simply multiply the weekly total by the number of weeks worked.
fatal accident rate is number of fatal accidents x 100,000 divided by the total hours worked. Accident incident rate is the total number of accidents x 100,000 divided by the total hours worked. accident severity rate is the total days lost x 1,000 divided by the total hours worked
Safe man hours is the number of hours worked minus the number of hours lost due to unsafe work or lost work due to an incident. This should get you the answer to total safe man hours.
FAR = (Number of fatalities*10^8) / Total hours worked by all employee
(No. of Reportable Accidents * 100,000) / Total No. of Hours Worked for all Employees = AFR
To calculate overtime man-hours, first determine the total hours worked by an employee in a given pay period. Subtract the standard hours (usually 40 hours per week in the U.S.) from the total hours worked to find the overtime hours. Multiply the overtime hours by the number of employees working those hours to find total overtime man-hours. For example, if two employees worked 10 hours of overtime, the total overtime man-hours would be 20 hours (2 employees x 10 hours).
The Accident Man has 414 pages.
The Accident Man was created on 2007-07-02.
Wee accident
500 manpower X 40 hours a week X 50 weeks per year = 1000000