Glove - Selection Guide


Glove - Selection Guide

Hand Safety - Glove Selection

Protect your Hands with Proper Glove

Glove selection is a important step in preventing one of our most common types of injury.  If properly selected, a glove can offer adequate protection without hindering our ability to perform our tasks.

         Hazard Assessment
         Should be conducted on a Job Safety Analysis or Task Safety Analysis form
         Involve all Supervisor and employees who perform the task
         Should focus on a particular task

         Prioritize Needs
         If tools, blocking, guarding, or other effective controls cannot eliminate the hazard then hand protection is needed.
         Use the “Glove Needs Assessment & Selection” tool to gather and prioritize needs.
         This is a collaborative process involves the employees who perform the work.
         Ideally, gloves are selected which offer the highest protection while still allowing the wearer to perform their job unencumbered.
         There is no single glove that offers every kind of protection and performance need.
         Manufacturer’s now offer some gloves that do offer more than one primary form of protection, such as cut resistance and puncture resistance.
         There are often tradeoffs between protection & performance.  Higher levels of protection sometimes results in lower dexterity and vice-versa.  Both factors are equally important in ensuring employees can perform their job well and safely. 
         Ignoring the importance of dexterity in a task will result in employees taking their gloves off to perform a task that requires hand protection
         If the hazard poses potential for high severity injuries, a glove with greater protection takes precedence over dexterity.
         If the hazards are lower in severity such as nicks, scrapes, and pokes and high dexterity is needed, then a glove with the index finger and thumb tip removed may offer the best solution.

         Identify the right glove
         If the gloves there do not meet your needs, look at other manufacturer’s offerings and request your choice be added .
         Engage employees, similar sites and programs, and safety professionals to ensure the right selection is made

         Preparing to order
         Determine what sizes the gloves are offered in.  Some may offer S, M, or L others use numerical sizing such as 5, 6, or 7.
         Locate a sizing chart for the glove through the manufacturer.
         Gather sizes and quantity info from employees.  The glove must fit properly in order to do the job well and safely.
         Place order.

Ensure the gloves are certified.