A plant walkdown method for identifying no-touch opportunities before the next hand injury happens.
In many industrial tasks, the hand quietly becomes the control system. It steadies the load, guides the plate, pushes the belt, aligns the hole, retrieves the part, or stops the swing. PPE may protect the hand — but it does not remove the hand from the hazard.
If a worker repeatedly has to touch a moving load, suspended component, hot surface, sharp edge, belt, pipe, plate, roller, hook, chain, trolley or machine part to complete the task — the exposure is not behavioural. It is engineered into the task.
PSC is not selling PPE here. This guide teaches operations, maintenance and safety teams how to identify where hands are still being used as tools, controls, guides, stabilisers, brakes, clamps, sensors and alignment aids — and where engineered distance can replace them.
The most dangerous hand exposure often appears not during the main lift or movement, but during the final approach, positioning and seating stages — the last few inches where workers instinctively reach in to correct, guide, align or stabilise.
The hand is not the control. The tool is the control.
An improvised rod, pipe or hook is not just a bad practice. It is evidence. The worker has already identified the need for distance and created it — using whatever was available. The plant has already recognised the problem. What is missing is an engineered interface.
When you see improvisation, you have found the gap between identified risk and engineered solution. Document it. It is one of the clearest no-touch signals on the shopfloor.
| Observation | Check | Notes | No-Touch Opportunity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Is the worker touching a moving or suspended load? | Tagline / Push-pull tool | ||
| Is the hand used to push, pull, guide or steady material? | Positioning tool / Guide pole | ||
| Does the hand enter a pinch, crush, cut, burn or impact zone? | Engineered interface | ||
| Is the worker close to the line of fire? | Distance / Load-control line | ||
| Is the task repeated daily, weekly or every shutdown? | High priority — act first | ||
| Is an improvised tool being used (rod, pipe, stick)? | Engineered equivalent | ||
| Is visibility poor during the hand-exposure phase of the task? | Tool extension / Relocation | ||
| Is the worker using gloves as the primary protection strategy? | PPE ≠ elimination | ||
| Is there a final positioning or seating stage in the task? | Fixture / Alignment aid | ||
| Could a tool, handle, guide, magnet, tagline, rope, fixture or bracket replace the hand? | Contact PSC for review |
PSC works from your actual tasks — not from generic product lists. Share what you observe. PSC maps where the hand enters and identifies what no-touch methods are possible.
The next no-touch opportunity may already be visible on your shopfloor. It may be the worker holding a load by hand, guiding a plate, pushing a belt, pulling a hose, clearing a jam, aligning a hole — or using a pipe because no proper tool exists.
Share one task photo or short video with PSC. We will help identify where the hand enters and what no-touch options may be possible.
Share a Task Photo for Review →