Quarry Southern Africa May 2018 | Page 42

INSIGHT UNDERSTANDING SUBSTANCE ABUSE Substance abuse in mines and quarries is better controlled when there is a broader understanding of it, writes Rhys Evans. 40 _ QUARRY SA | MAY/JUNE 2018 abuse in the workplace and that both alcohol and cannabis use can be controlled among mineworkers through awareness programmes, substance use testing, rehabilitation programmes to assist those who use substances, disciplinary measures for offenders and recreational facilities to relieve boredom. The controls – breathalysers and random drug testing – have a significant effect in curbing substance abuse and ensuring miners use these substances more responsibly. The mines selected for the study all had codes of conduct in place that variously prohibited possession or use of substances in the workplace. Some had established regular and random testing procedures; others only tested when an incident occurred. The majority had instituted disciplinary measures and had rehabilitation programmes in place for workers diagnosed with chronic abuse. The highest cannabis use prevalence (21.5%) and breathalyser results above the legal driving limit (5.9%), occurred at a mine that has no mechanisms in place to implement the measures in its code of conduct. Mines that have alcohol policies in place and where random breathalyser testing of employees is carried out have lower levels of positive breathalyser results. ■ T he cost of alcohol and drug abuse to South Africa has been estimated at R2-billion a year. This is important to the mining and quarrying industry, where prevalence is significantly higher and impacts safety, productivity and the bottom line. The first priority for any mine is keeping workers who are under the influence of drugs and alcohol off the site. However, to manage and reduce incidents of abuse a broader understanding of the causes and a holistic strategy to address them, is needed. Employees suffering from substance abuse are more likely to have problems with perception and motor skills, suffer from anxiety, paranoia, depression and violent behaviour. They have difficulty concentrating and processing information and are more likely to make lapses in judgement. On site, workers who have alcohol in their blood or use cannabis are a danger to themselves and their co-workers. A single mistake can cost many lives, result in work stoppage and ultimately, loss of income for the mine. Driven by this knowledge, the need to comply with health and safety regulations and the growing impact of loss of reputation that such incidents result in, many mines have put measures in place to manage substance abuse. But stopping abuse at the gate is not enough. A recent study notes that stress, loneliness, poverty, boredom and inadequate health education contribute to the use of both cannabis and alcohol. These study results agree with the knowledge ALCO Safe has acquired through 25 years’ experience in providing mines and quarries in South Africa and Africa with breathalyser and drug-testing solutions to help them test for, monitor and control substance abuse. In my experience, this is borne out in the contrast we see in the low levels of abuse at established mines and quarries where a community has grown around the mine and miners have their families to go home to, versus high-levels of abuse at newly or poorly established operations where workers are away from their families, stress levels are high and there are few amenities. What has become increasingly clear to ALCO Safe is that companies that are most successful at reducing abuse are the ones that try to understand what drives substance abuse, address it, and create a culture of safety that permeates the workplace and extends into the community. A Mining Health and Safety Council of South Africa study indicates that participants are well aware of the dangers of alcohol Rhys Evans is manager director at ALCO Safe.