
Summary
The dishroom is one of the highest-risk areas in any commercial kitchen
Between steam, chemicals, broken glass, wet floors, heavy racks, noise, and extreme temperatures, injury risk is constant. Most dishroom injuries are completely preventable with correct layout, equipment, training, and procedures.
This guide covers:
- Top dishroom injury causes
- Required OSHA protections
- Steam & burn injury prevention
- Chemical exposure protection
- Slip/fall prevention
- Repetitive motion & lifting safety
- Noise exposure
- PPE requirements
- Emergency response procedures
WHY THE DISHROOM HAS ONE OF THE HIGHEST INJURY RATES IN FOODSERVICE
Common dishroom hazards operate simultaneously:
- Extreme heat
- Wet floors
- Heavy racks
- Slippery grease
- Sharp objects
- Chemical exposure
- Pressurized water
- Confined work zones
This combination creates:
- High workers’ comp claims
- High turnover
- OSHA citations
- Lost production hours
- Staff burnout
TOP DISHROOM INJURIES BY CATEGORY
STEAM & BURN INJURY PREVENTION
High-Risk Areas:
- Conveyor discharge
- Door-type final rinse
- Booster heater piping
- Steam condensate return
- Hood drip points
Required Controls:
- Hood with proper capture
- Steam shields where required
- Insulated piping
- Burn-resistant gloves
- Clear machine opening SOP
- No reaching into active rinse cycles
- Lockout before cleaning
Burn incidents often result in:
- OSHA recordable injuries
- Long workers’ comp claims
- Staff reassignment or loss
CHEMICAL EXPOSURE & SDS COMPLIANCE
Dishrooms use:
- Detergents
- Rinse aids
- Degreasers
- Delimers
- Sanitizers
Required by OSHA:
- SDS binder on-site
- Proper secondary labeling
- Eye wash station within required distance
- Chemical splash goggles
- Aprons & gloves
- Locked chemical storage
Top Chemical Injury Causes:
- Open containers left unattended
- Improper chemical mixing
- Injector leaks
- Splashing while refilling
- Untrained employees
SLIP, TRIP & FALL PREVENTION
Primary Causes:
- Standing water
- Grease accumulation
- Clogged trench drains
- Overspray from pre-rinse
- Leaking machines
Required Controls:
- Slip-resistant flooring
- Adequate floor slope to drains
- Regular drain cleaning
- Anti-fatigue mats where allowed
- No hose spray toward walkways
- Immediate spill response SOP
Slip/fall injuries are the most expensive category of dishroom workers’ comp claims.
LIFTING, RACK HANDLING & ERGONOMIC SAFETY
Dishroom staff are at high risk for:
- Repetitive stress injuries
- Hernias
- Disc compression
- Shoulder tears
Required Controls:
- No overloading racks
- Push, never pull, loaded racks
- Two-person loads for bulk wares
- Proper rack cart height
- Anti-fatigue mats
- Mechanical conveyors when volume is high
GLASS, SHARP & BROKEN WARE SAFETY
Top Causes of Lacerations:
- Finger-sorting broken glass
- Loose knife loading
- Broken glass in scrap troughs
- Reaching into opaque soak tubs
Required Controls:
- Broken glass hazard protocol
- Cut-resistant gloves
- Magnetic knife racks
- Solid scrap screens
- No hand-sorting of broken glass
NOISE EXPOSURE AT CONVEYOR & FLIGHT MACHINES
High-volume dishrooms routinely exceed:
- 85 dBA for continuous exposure
Risks:
- Hearing loss
- Fatigue
- Communication failure
- Increased accident rate
Controls:
- Sound attenuation panels
- Enclosed pulper housings
- Hearing protection where required
- Routine noise exposure monitoring
BIOLOGICAL & CONTAMINATION PROTECTION
Dishrooms handle:
- Raw protein residue
- Bodily fluid-contaminated wares (healthcare)
- Biofilm-laden drains
Controls:
- Proper PPE
- No bare-hand drain cleaning
- Bio-hazard disposal protocols
- Dedicated red-tag cleaning tools
REQUIRED DISHROOM PPE (BY ROLE)
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EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROCEDURES
Every dishroom must have:
- Chemical spill containment
- Emergency eye wash access
- Burn treatment kits
- Electrical lockout procedures
- Slip/fall incident reporting
- Emergency shutdown SOP
OSHA & REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
Dishrooms fall under:
- OSHA General Industry Standards
- Hazard Communication (1910.1200)
- PPE Standard (1910 Subpart I)
- Electrical Safety
- Confined Work Area Guidelines
Failure to comply results in:
- Citations
- Fines
- Increased insurance premiums
- Liability exposure
PREVENTIVE DESIGN FEATURES THAT REDUCE INJURIES
- One-way dirty-to-clean flow
- Adequate aisle clearance
- Proper rack height
- Non-slip floor coatings
- Curbs between wet & dry zones
- Splash guards
- Steam hoods
- Noise barriers
WHY A DEALER MATTERS FOR SAFETY
A professional dealer:
- Prevents unsafe spacing
- Selects ergonomic equipment
- Designs splash control
- Coordinates hood placement
- Matches machine height to rack carts
- Reduces lifting loads
- Eliminates blind spots
Online equipment purchases do not evaluate safety risk.
BOTTOM LINE
Dishroom injuries are not random accidents.
They are predictable failures of layout, equipment selection, utilities, training, or maintenance.
A safe dishroom is:
- Engineered for steam control
- Designed for water containment
- Built around ergonomic movement
- Protected from chemical exposure
- Supported by PPE & training
- Maintained with discipline




