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Ensure the safety of lone workers

Introduction

Increasing numbers of people work alone, either some or all of the time.

Many people who travel for work, who work at night - or who work from home - are lone workers, for example. Small businesses frequently employ people who work alone - from shop assistants to warehouse staff. And many self-employed people work alone, too.

Working alone can create extra health and safety risks. If you employ lone workers, or if you're self-employed and you work alone, you'll need to manage these risks.

This guide outlines the legal requirements associated with lone working. It also highlights the special risks faced by lone workers and how you can control them.

Subjects covered in this guide

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People, health and welfare

 

Ensure the safety of lone workers

 

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Introduction

 

What is a lone worker?

 

Your responsibilities to lone workers

 

The health and safety responsibilities of people who work alone

 

Carry out a risk assessment for lone workers

 

Checklist: assessing possible risks for lone workers

 

Security for people working alone

 

Special considerations for lone workers who deal with the public

 

People who work alone from home

 

Monitoring lone workers' health and safety effectively

 

Here's how we ensured the safety of a lone worker (Flash video)