How Workplace Safety Saves Costs and Protects Your Business
Discover how workplace safety reduces costs, boosts productivity, and protects your business. Learn effective strategies to prevent workplace accidents and enhance operational efficiency.
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Leather offers poor protection against liquids. Some forms, such as cow-hide, stiffen when re-dried, limiting both flexibility and tactility. It also offers no thermal defence when wet, meaning the wearer will experience discomfort along with a loss of mobility.
Despite being regarded as long lasting, leather is still susceptible to wear and tear. More importantly, if a glove offers the wearer little or no protection against hazards, product life span is a meaningless measure.
Leather’s reputation and use against cut injury is unwarranted, as it is one of the poorest rating materials — even heavy cotton canvas outperforms leather in cut resistance testing. Understanding the limitations of leather will lead to better decision making in hand protection selection. The following erroneous beliefs have given leather an undeserved reputation.
Thick leather offers no more protection than a lighter weight alternative. In fact, heavier leather impedes grip, movement and dexterity, making it difficult to work with tools or small components.
Leather is one of the least comfortable material options. Sewn flat, gloves usually feature irritating interior seams. Leather lacks the fit, form and breathability of other available materials.
Selecting a general-purpose solution in the name of economy is more expensive in the long run, potentially leading to productivity loss, injury and decreased moral. Providing a glove choice that meets the demands of a task increases safety policy compliance.