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💪 Safe Lifting Techniques

Topic: Proper lifting mechanics, team lifting, and preventing back injuries Duration: 5–8 minutes Standard: OSHA General Duty Clause — Ergonomic hazard prevention


The Stats

  • Back injuries are the most common injury in construction after falls
  • Construction workers lift, carry, push, or pull materials hundreds of times per day
  • One in four construction workers will experience a serious back injury during their career
  • The average cost of a back injury workers' comp claim is $40,000–$80,000
  • Most back injuries are preventable with proper technique

The Right Way to Lift

Before the Lift — Plan It

  1. Assess the load — How heavy? How big? Is it balanced? Can you grip it?
  2. Check your path — Is the route clear? Are there stairs, slopes, or obstacles?
  3. Check the destination — Is there a clear place to set it down?
  4. Get help if needed — Too heavy? Too awkward? Too far? Ask for help.

During the Lift — 8 Steps

StepWhat to DoWhy
1. Stand closeFeet shoulder-width apart, one foot slightly ahead, as close to the load as possibleReduces strain on your back — the farther the load, the harder your back works
2. Squat downBend at the knees and hips, not at the waistEngages your legs (strongest muscles), not your lower back
3. Straight backKeep your back straight and chest upDistributes load across your spine evenly
4. Grip firmlyUse your whole hand, not just your fingersPrevents dropping and sudden jerking
5. Tighten your coreBrace your stomach muscles as you liftStabilizes your spine
6. Lift with legsPush up with your legs — stand slowly and smoothlyYour legs are 5x stronger than your back
7. Keep it closeHold the load close to your body, between waist and chest heightArm's length = 10x the strain on your back
8. Move your feetTurn your whole body by moving your feet — never twist at the waistTwisting under load is the #1 cause of disc injuries

Setting Down — Reverse the Process

  • Squat with your legs, keeping your back straight
  • Set the load down smoothly — don't drop it
  • Keep your fingers clear of pinch points

When to Get Help

Team Lift (2+ People)

Get help when the load is:

  • Over 50 lbs (NIOSH recommended limit for one person)
  • Awkward or bulky — sheets of plywood, drywall, long pipe
  • Difficult to grip — smooth, round, or wet
  • Above shoulder height — higher lifts = more strain
  • Below knee level — deep bending = more strain
  • A long carry distance — fatigue increases injury risk

Team lift rules:

  • One person directs: "Ready? Lift on three. One, two, three — lift."
  • Lift and lower at the same time
  • Walk at the same pace
  • Communicate: "I need to stop," "Let me adjust," "Setting down."

Use Mechanical Assistance

Use equipment whenever possible — it's faster AND safer:

ToolUse For
Hand truck / dollyMoving boxes, equipment, bundled materials
WheelbarrowConcrete, gravel, loose materials
Forklift / telehandlerPallets, heavy equipment, bulk materials
Crane / hoistSteel, precast, heavy assembled components
Material cartDrywall, plywood, sheet materials
Pipe rollerLong pipe runs
Vacuum lifterGlass, stone panels, smooth heavy sheets

Common Lifting Mistakes

MistakeWhat HappensFix
Bending at the waistAll pressure on lower back discsSquat with your knees, keep back straight
Twisting while liftingDisc herniation, muscle tearsMove your feet to turn your whole body
Reaching and lifting10x the force on your spineGet close to the load first
Jerking the loadSudden muscle strain or tearLift smoothly and steadily
Carrying too farFatigue leads to dropped loadsUse a dolly, cart, or multiple shorter carries
One-handed liftingUneven strain, loss of controlUse both hands whenever possible
Lifting while fatiguedMuscles can't protect your spineTake breaks, rotate tasks, ask for help

Protecting Your Back All Day

It's not just about one lift — it's the cumulative effect of lifting all day:

  • Stretch before starting work — loosen your back, legs, and shoulders
  • Rotate tasks — alternate between lifting and non-lifting activities
  • Take micro-breaks — stand straight and stretch your back every 30 minutes
  • Stay hydrated — dehydrated muscles cramp and tear more easily
  • Maintain fitness — a strong core is the best protection for your back
  • Report pain early — a minor strain treated today prevents a major injury next month

What NOT To Do

❌ Never lift more than you can handle — asking for help is not weakness ❌ Never bend at the waist to lift from the ground ❌ Never twist your torso while carrying a load ❌ Never carry a load that blocks your vision ❌ Never try to catch a falling load — step back and let it fall ❌ Never lift while standing on a ladder or unstable surface ❌ Never rush a lift — speed kills your back


Discussion Questions

  1. What's the heaviest thing we lift regularly on this project? Can we use mechanical assistance instead?
  2. Has anyone pulled or strained their back on a jobsite? What happened?
  3. Where are our hand trucks, dollies, and carts stored?
  4. When was the last time you asked someone for help lifting something? Why is that hard to do?

Today's Commitment

"I will lift with my legs, ask for help with heavy or awkward loads, and use mechanical equipment when it's available."


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