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Description

Episode 43 provides a foundational overview of Process Safety Management (PSM) — what it is, why it exists, and how it protects workers, facilities, and communities from catastrophic chemical incidents. Dr. Ayers sets the stage for the entire PSM series by explaining the purpose, scope, and structure of OSHA’s PSM Standard (29 CFR 1910.119).

The core message: PSM is not about compliance — it’s about preventing low‑frequency, high‑consequence events that can change lives in seconds.


 
🧭 What PSM Is and Why It Exists

PSM is a comprehensive management system designed to prevent:

It applies to facilities that handle highly hazardous chemicals above threshold quantities. These chemicals can cause mass casualties and community‑scale impacts if released.

PSM was created in response to major industrial disasters such as:

These events demonstrated the need for a structured, systems‑based approach to chemical safety.


 
🧩 The 14 Elements of PSM

Episode 43 introduces the 14 interlocking elements that make up the PSM standard:

  1. Employee Participation

  2. Process Safety Information (PSI)

  3. Process Hazard Analysis (PHA)

  4. Operating Procedures

  5. Training

  6. Contractors

  7. Pre‑Startup Safety Review (PSSR)

  8. Mechanical Integrity

  9. Hot Work

  10. Management of Change (MOC)

  11. Incident Investigation

  12. Emergency Planning and Response

  13. Compliance Audits

  14. Trade Secrets

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that PSM works only when all elements function together — weaknesses in one element undermine the entire system.


 
🔍 How PSM Differs From General Safety

PSM focuses on process safety, not personal safety.


Personal Safety
Process Safety

Process safety incidents are rare but catastrophic, which is why PSM requires a structured, disciplined approach.


 
🧪 Key Themes Introduced in the Episode

Dr. Ayers highlights several foundational concepts:


1. Systems Thinking

Catastrophic incidents rarely have a single cause — they result from multiple failures across systems.


2. Hazard Recognition

Understanding chemical and process hazards is the starting point for all PSM activities.


3. Layers of Protection

Safeguards must be independent, reliable, and maintained.


4. Human Factors

Fatigue, workload, communication, and interface design all influence process safety.


5. Continuous Improvement

PSM is a living system — it must evolve with changes in technology, operations, and knowledge.


 
🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

The episode’s core message: PSM is about preventing catastrophic events. It requires leadership, discipline, and a commitment to doing things right — every time.