Physical survival
Tags: danger, Hazard, health, risk, survivalPosted in PhD life, Tips for junior scientists, Tips for senior scientists
This blog focuses on professional and social survival. Here, I talk about physical survival: Get through your Ph.D., and hopefully also through the rest of your research career without damaging your health or even your life.

The theorists think they are not at risk and can stop reading here. The experimentalists think they’re careful enough and can stop reading now - do you really want to take the chance? There are at least three important categories of occupational hazards for scientists, which I aim to make you aware of.
1 - Laboratory risks. Remember that the most important hazards in the laboratory are everyday objects and substances that do not appear to pose a special threat. Nitrogen gas, water, electricity, vacuum chambers, knives, heavy objects are real killers, and that is not meant as a metaphor. It’s the hazards you don’t expect and are unprepared for that are the most dangerous.
2 - Office risks. Repetitive strain injury, sick-building syndrome, backaches, copier toner allergy, and and falling books are unlikely to kill you in the literal sense. But they may steer your career in a not-very-positive direction.







Readers' comments
I agree that the Windows installation can be tricky, it worked much better on the Mac or Linux. But one ...
22:05, Jan
Well, you'd hope that the chair(wo)man does the job when someone is about to go over time. If you don't ...
11 Mar 2010 20:56, Mirjam
(I'm typing this comment for the third time now... *sigh*) Many people don't know this, but Google Docs has a built-in ...
9 Mar 2010 23:47, cpbotha
For senior scientists it may be a conscious (although stupid) choice to give a talk to impress people, instead of ...
9 Mar 2010 10:35, Mirjam
What do you mean by 'pointing stick'? Obviously, we don't live in an ideal world, but fortunately most scientists will ...
22 Jan 2010 8:28, Mirjam