No matter how safe an organization is or how high-quality its service and products are, there is always room for improvement. Take this training to learn more about the concept of continuous improvement for incident management systems. Ideal learners are managers, supervisors and safety committee members.
No one likes to be told they are doing something incorrectly or to be criticized. There are ways you can both give and receive feedback that will make safety conversations more engaging and productive instead of defensive and emotional. Take this course to learn best practices for giving and receiving safety feedback effectively. Ideal learners are all employees, including managers, supervisors and safety committee members.
Have you ever heard the old expression that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results? We can apply that expression to safety in the case of companies that keep doing the same things over and over but somehow expect that their workplaces will somehow become safer. We have to look at what we are doing and figure out how we can improve. That is why we have incident investigation an MORE...
If you saw an unsafe condition at work, would you know what to do? If you were performing a safety inspection, would you know how to make the most of your time? In this course, you will learn how you can use inspections and observations to promote safety in your workplace. Ideal learners are all employees, including managers, supervisors and safety committee members.
Accurate injury and illness recordkeeping and reporting can help your employer avoid costly fines from OSHA and can improve the information and data they use to make important decisions about workplace health and safety. Take this course to learn what to record and report and how to complete OSHA Form 300, OSHA Form 301 and OSHA Form 300A. Ideal learners are managers and employers.
Tasks and corrective actions give you a chance to put everything you learned during inspections and observations to work so that you can improve safety. Take this course to learn about factors that should influence the corrective actions you choose and best practices you should follow. This course is intended for all industries and construction employees, including managers.
You cannot continuously improve safety unless you constantly evaluate the performance of your incident management system. The best way to improve safety is to follow through on your plans and then analyze the results to see if there is room for improvement. Take this course to learn about the data you should analyze, what it can tell you and how you can follow up. Ideal learners are managers, supervisors and safety committee members.
Even careful employees may experience near misses or minor injuries or damage equipment. Every incident is an opportunity to learn. Take this course to learn what the what if? mentality is, why it's useful, and how it can help employees report incidents and supervisors and safety professionals find secondary hazards. This course is ideal for all employees.
Federal law provides employees with the basic right to know the extent and consequences of their exposure to harmful substances they work with. This means they are entitled to full access to all of the medical and exposure records generated for them while working for a given employer. This course covers employee rights to access medical exposure records, how to access those records and what information is exempt from employee access.
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