- Prepare a rescue plan specific to each work at height location and method.
- Provide rescue equipment at the work location and check it is ready for use.
- Train the rescue team in the equipment and procedures before height work starts.
- Rehearse the rescue plan with a practice drill before the first working shift.
- Brief every person working at height on the rescue plan and their role in it.
- Include a trauma strap in every harness kit for immediate self-rescue relief.
- Plan rescue to achieve recovery within 15 minutes of a fall or suspension.
- Identify the nearest point from which a MEWP can access a suspended casualty.
- Review the rescue plan whenever the work location or access method changes.
- Record the rescue plan briefing with names and dates for each operative.
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- DON'T work at height without a rescue plan specific to the work location.
- DON'T rely on the fire service as your primary rescue plan — they take too long.
- DON'T skip the rescue drill — untested plans fail when lives depend on them.
- DON'T assume a conscious suspended worker is safe — suspension trauma progresses rapidly.
- DON'T place rescue equipment where it cannot be reached quickly in an emergency.
- DON'T allow height work before the rescue team has been briefed and trained.
- DON'T leave a suspended casualty hanging — begin rescue immediately.
- DON'T lower a casualty flat on their back after suspension — keep them seated.
- DON'T use a generic rescue plan — it must match the specific site and access method.
- DON'T forget to review the plan when conditions or work areas change.
See also: Harness and Lanyard Use | Working at Height Hierarchy of Control
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