Emergency kits that are not maintained are worse than no kits at all because they create false confidence. A first aid kit with expired medications, depleted bandages, and empty antiseptic bottles cannot provide the care it promises. A spill kit with dried-out absorbent material and missing personal protective equipment cannot contain a chemical spill. An emergency supply cache with dead flashlight batteries and empty water bottles cannot support staff and clients during a power outage or natural disaster. Training staff to inspect, maintain, and restock emergency kits on a regular schedule ensures that these critical resources are ready when emergencies occur.
Emergency kits follow a predictable pattern of deterioration in salon environments. When first assembled or purchased, the kit is complete and ready. Over the following weeks and months, items are borrowed and not replaced. A bandage is used for a minor cut and not restocked. Gloves are taken for a cleaning task. Batteries discharge through storage. Antiseptic solutions expire. Absorbent materials are used for routine spills rather than reserved for emergencies. Within six months without active maintenance, a well-stocked emergency kit can become functionally useless.
This deterioration goes unnoticed until the kit is needed. A staff member opens the first aid kit to respond to a client who has fainted and discovers that the ammonia inhalant capsules expired two years ago, the cold pack has already been activated and discarded, and there are no nitrile gloves. A chemical spill occurs and the spill kit contains a single pair of torn gloves and half a bag of absorbent granules. These failures compound the emergency rather than mitigating it.
The root cause is that emergency kit maintenance is not assigned, scheduled, or tracked. Without a specific person responsible for inspection, without a defined inspection schedule, and without a checklist that specifies what should be in the kit, maintenance does not happen because it is nobody's priority until the emergency reveals it should have been.
OSHA's general industry standard at 29 CFR 1910.151 requires that adequate first aid supplies be readily available in the workplace, and that the supplies be appropriate for the types of injuries that may occur.
ANSI Z308.1 establishes minimum contents for workplace first aid kits, classified by kit type and the number of workers served. The standard also specifies that first aid supplies must be inspected frequently to ensure that expended items are replaced.
OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard requires that personal protective equipment including gloves, face shields, and resuscitation devices be accessible for use in first aid and bloodborne pathogen exposure situations.
OSHA's hazard communication standard requires that emergency equipment including spill kits and eyewash stations be accessible and maintained for responding to chemical emergencies.
State cosmetology board regulations may specify minimum first aid supplies that must be present in the salon.
Fire codes require that fire extinguishers be inspected monthly and professionally serviced annually.
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Emergency kit maintenance reflects the emergency preparedness that the MmowW assessment evaluates.
Open every emergency kit in your salon right now. Check whether all items are present, within their expiration dates, and in usable condition. Check the fire extinguisher pressure gauge. Test the eyewash station. If any kit is depleted or expired, maintenance is overdue.
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Try it free →Step 1: Inventory All Emergency Kits and Equipment
Document every emergency kit and piece of emergency equipment in the salon. This typically includes one or more first aid kits positioned in the service area and back-of-house, a bloodborne pathogen response kit, chemical spill kits near the mixing station and storage area, fire extinguishers, an eyewash station, flashlights and batteries for power outages, and any additional emergency supplies such as an AED if the salon has one. For each item, record its location, contents, and the expiration dates of all dated items. This inventory becomes the master checklist for all future inspections.
Step 2: Create a Contents Checklist for Each Kit
For each emergency kit, create a laminated checklist that lists every item the kit should contain, the required quantity of each item, and the expiration date of each dated item. Attach the checklist to the inside lid or outside of the kit so that inspectors can verify contents against the checklist without memorizing what should be present. For the first aid kit, the checklist should include at minimum adhesive bandages in assorted sizes, sterile gauze pads, adhesive tape, elastic bandages, triangular bandage, scissors, tweezers, nitrile gloves in multiple sizes, antiseptic wipes, antibiotic ointment, instant cold packs, burn cream or gel, eye wash solution, CPR breathing barrier, and a first aid manual. Adjust the contents based on the specific hazards present in your salon.
Step 3: Assign Maintenance Responsibility
Designate a specific staff member as the emergency kit maintenance coordinator. This person is responsible for conducting scheduled inspections, restocking depleted items, replacing expired items, and reporting any issues that require management attention such as damaged equipment or items that need professional servicing. Designate a backup person who can perform inspections when the primary coordinator is absent. Include emergency kit maintenance in the position description and performance expectations so that it is recognized as a real responsibility rather than an afterthought.
Step 4: Establish an Inspection Schedule
Set inspection frequencies for each type of emergency equipment. First aid kits should be inspected monthly and after each use. Check that all items are present, quantities are adequate, and no items have expired. Chemical spill kits should be inspected monthly and after each use. Verify that absorbent materials, PPE, disposal bags, and neutralizing agents are present and in condition. Fire extinguishers should be inspected monthly by verifying that the pressure gauge is in the green zone, the pin and tamper seal are intact, and the unit is accessible and mounted properly. Professional fire extinguisher service should occur annually. Eyewash stations should be activated weekly to flush stagnant water and verify proper flow. AEDs should be inspected monthly for battery status, pad expiration, and readiness indicators. Flashlights should be tested monthly for battery function.
Step 5: Establish a Restocking System
Create a process for restocking emergency kit items that is as reliable as the process for restocking salon products. Maintain a supply of replacement items for common first aid supplies including bandages, gloves, antiseptic, and cold packs. Include emergency kit restocking items in the salon's regular supply order so that replacements are available when needed. When an item is used from any emergency kit, the person who used it should note the item on a restocking request form attached to the kit so that the maintenance coordinator knows what needs to be replaced. Set expiration date alerts in the salon calendar system for dated items so that replacement orders are placed before items expire. Budget for emergency kit maintenance as a recurring operational expense rather than treating it as an unexpected cost.
Step 6: Document Inspections and Maintain Records
Record every inspection on a dated log that includes the inspector's name, the kit inspected, items found depleted or expired, actions taken to restock or replace, and the date the kit was returned to full readiness. Maintain these logs in a binder near the emergency kit location or in a digital file. Inspection records demonstrate regulatory compliance during health department or cosmetology board inspections. They also provide data on consumption patterns that help optimize restocking quantities. If inspections reveal that certain items are consistently depleted between inspection periods, increase the quantity stocked or increase inspection frequency. Review inspection logs quarterly to identify trends and improvement opportunities.
Salon-specific additions to a standard workplace first aid kit address the unique hazards of salon work. Chemical burn treatment supplies including sterile saline for eye irrigation and burn gel for skin chemical burns address the risk of chemical splash from hair color, developer, and cleaning products. A styptic pencil or hemostatic agent addresses minor bleeding from nicks during shaving and waxing. An epinephrine auto-injector, if permitted in your jurisdiction and if staff are trained in its use, addresses the risk of anaphylactic reactions to hair dye or other salon chemicals. Instant cold packs address burns from hot tools. Finger splints address injuries from dropping equipment on hands. The specific additions should be based on a hazard assessment of the services your salon offers and the injuries that are most likely to occur.
Fire extinguishers have a service life that depends on their type. Disposable fire extinguishers, which are common in small commercial settings, are designed for single use and should be replaced after any discharge, after failing a monthly inspection, or when they reach the manufacturer's specified expiration date, typically 12 years from manufacture. Rechargeable fire extinguishers can be professionally serviced and recharged after use or when the pressure gauge indicates low pressure. Rechargeable units require professional hydrostatic testing at intervals specified by the manufacturer and the fire code, typically every 5 to 12 years depending on the type. Annual professional inspection by a fire extinguisher service company is required regardless of type. If a fire extinguisher shows visible damage, corrosion, or has a gauge in the red zone, it should be replaced or serviced immediately rather than waiting for the next scheduled inspection.
Using emergency kit supplies for routine purposes is one of the primary causes of kit depletion. Bandages used for minor cuts during normal work, gloves taken for cleaning tasks, and scissors borrowed for non-emergency use gradually empty the kit without triggering a restocking response. The best practice is to maintain separate supplies for routine first aid and daily use and to reserve emergency kit contents for actual emergencies. Stock a separate supply of bandages, gloves, and other frequently used items at each workstation for routine use. Label the emergency kit clearly with a notice that its contents are reserved for emergencies and should not be used for routine purposes. If items must be taken from the emergency kit for a legitimate purpose, immediate documentation and restocking should follow.
Emergency kit maintenance training ensures that your salon's safety resources are ready when seconds matter most. Evaluate your emergency preparedness with the free hygiene assessment tool and access resources at MmowW Shampoo. 安全で、愛される。 Loved for Safety.
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