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OSHA Recordkeeping Requirements

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OSHA RECORDKEEPING REQUIREMENTS Revised Recordkeeping rule effective on January 1, 2002 Updates three recordkeeping forms OSHA Form 300 Log of Work-Related ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: OSHA Recordkeeping Requirements


1
OSHA Recordkeeping Requirements
  • Revised Recordkeeping rule effective on January
    1, 2002
  • Updates three recordkeeping forms
  • OSHA Form 300 Log of Work-Related Injuries and
    Illnesses
  • OSHA Form 301 Injury and Illness Incident
    Report
  • OSHA Form 300A Summary of Work-Related Injuries
    and Illnesses

1904.29
2
OSHA Form 300
3
OSHA Form 301
4
(No Transcript)
5
Recording Criteria
  • Eliminates different criteria for recording
    work-related injuries and work-related illnesses
  • Former rule required employers to record all
    illnesses, regardless of severity
  • Letter of interpretation on reporting dates

1904.4
6
Recording Criteria Decision Tree
1904.4
7
Work-Relatedness
  • Cases are work-related if
  • An event or exposure in the work environment
    either caused or contributed to the resulting
    condition
  • An event or exposure in the work environment
    significantly aggravated a pre-existing injury or
    illness

1904.5
8
Work-Relatedness
  • Work-relatedness is presumed for injuries and
    illnesses resulting from events or exposures
    occurring in the work environment
  • A case is presumed work-related if, and only if,
    an event or exposure in the work environment is a
    discernible cause of the injury or illness or of
    a significant aggravation to a pre-existing
    condition. The work event or exposure need only
    be one of the discernible causes it need not be
    the sole or predominant cause

9
Work-Related Exceptions
  • Adds additional exceptions to the definition of
    work relationship to limit recording of cases
    involving
  • eating, drinking, or preparing food or drink for
    personal consumption
  • common colds and flu
  • voluntary participation in wellness or fitness
    programs
  • personal grooming or self-medication

1904.5(b)(2)
10
General Recording Criteria
  • Requires records to include any work-related
    injury or illness resulting in one of the
    following
  • Death
  • Days away from work
  • Restricted work or transfer to another job
  • Medical treatment beyond first aid
  • Loss of consciousness
  • Diagnosis of a significant injury/illness by a
    physician or other licensed health care
    professional

1904.7(a)
11
General Recording Criteria (continued)
  • Includes new definitions of medical treatment and
    first aid to simplify recording decisions
  • Clarifies the recording of light duty or
    restricted work cases
  • Letter of Interpretation on Temporary Employees

1904.7(b)(5)
12
Recording Needlesticks
  • Requires employers to record all needlestick and
    sharps injuries involving contamination by
    another persons blood or other potentially
    infectious material

1904.8
13
Hearing Loss
  • Starting January 1, 2003, record all work-related
    hearing loss cases where
  • Employee has experienced a Standard Threshold
    Shift (STS)1, and
  • Employees total hearing level is 25 decibels
    (dB) or more above audiometric zero averaged at
    2000, 3000, and 4000 hertz (Hz) in the same ears
    as the STS
  • 1 A STS is defined in OSHAs noise standard at 29
    CFR 1910.95(g)(10)(i) as a change in hearing
    threshold, relative to the baseline audiogram, of
    an average of 10 dB or more at 2000, 3000, and
    4000 Hz in one or both ears.

14
Musculoskeletal Disorders
  • Applies the same recording criteria to
    musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) as to all other
    injuries and illnesses
  • Employer retains flexibility to determine whether
    an event or exposure in the work environment
    caused or contributed to the MSD

15
Tuberculosis Medical Removal
  • Includes separate provisions describing the
    recording criteria for cases involving the
    work-related transmission of tuberculosis
  • Requires employers to record cases of medical
    removal under OSHA standards

1904.11 1904.9
16
Accident Scenarios
  • Scenario 1
  • An employee drives into the company parking lot
    at 730 a.m., exits his car, and proceeds to
    cross the parking lot to clock-in to work. A
    second employee, also on the way to work,
    approaches the first employee, and the two
    individuals get into a physical altercation in
    the parking lot. The first employee breaks an arm
    during the altercation. The employee goes to the
    doctor and receives medical treatment for his
    injury.
  • Company Response The company deems this
    non-work related, and therefore non-recordable,
    since the employees had not yet reported to work
    and a work task was not being performed at the
    time of the altercation.
  • OSHA Response The recordkeeping regulation
    contains no general exception for purposes of
    determining work-relationship for cases involving
    acts of violence in the work environment. Company
    parking lots/access roads are part of the
    employer's premises and therefore part of the
    employer's establishment. Whether the employee
    had not clocked in to work does not affect the
    outcome for determining work-relatedness. The
    case is recordable on the OSHA log, because the
    injury meets the general recording criteria
    contained in Section 1904.7.

17
Accident Scenarios
  • Scenario 2
  • An employee reports to work. Several hours
    later, the employee goes outside for a "smoke
    break." The employee slips on the ice and
    injures his back.
  • Company Response Since the employee was not
    performing a task related to the employee's work,
    the company has deemed this incident non-work
    related and therefore not recordable.
  • OSHA Response Under Section 1904.5(b)(2)(v), an
    injury or illness is not work-related if it is
    solely the result of an employee doing personal
    tasks (unrelated to their employment) at the
    establishment outside of the employee's assigned
    working hours. In order for this exception to
    apply, the case must meet both of the stated
    conditions. The exception does not apply here
    because the injury or illness occurred within
    normal working hours. Therefore, your case in
    question is work-related, and if it meets the
    general recording criteria under Section 1904.7
    the case must be recorded.

18
Counting days
  • Eliminates the term lost workdays and focuses
    on days away or days restricted or transferred
  • Includes new rules for counting that rely on
    calendar days instead of workdays

1904.7(b)(3)
19
Employee Involvement
  • Requires employers to establish a procedure for
    employees to report injuries and illnesses and
    tell their employees how to report
  • Employers are prohibited from discriminating
    against employees who do report
  • Employee representatives will now have access to
    those parts of the OSHA 301 form relevant to
    workplace safety and health

1904.35 36
20
Employee Privacy
  • Prohibits employers from entering an individuals
    name on Form 300 for certain types of
    injuries/illnesses
  • Provides employers the right not to describe the
    nature of sensitive injuries where the employees
    identity would be known
  • Gives employee representatives access only to the
    portion of Form 301 which contains no personal
    information
  • Requires employers to remove employees names
    before providing the data to persons not provided
    access rights under the rule
  • Letter of Interpretation

1904.29(b)
21
Annual Summary
  • Requires the annual summary to be posted for
    three months instead of one
  • Requires certification of the summary by a
    company executive

1904.32
22
Reporting to OSHA
  • Reporting of fatalities and catastrophes to
    exclude some public transportation and motor
    vehicle accidents
  • All employers must still comply with OSHA
    standards, display the OSHA poster, and report to
    OSHA within 8 hours
  • Any accident that results in one or more
    fatalities or
  • The hospitalization of three or more employees.
  • Orally report the fatality/multiple
    hospitalization by telephone or in person to the
    Area Office of the Occupational Safety and Health
    Administration (OSHA).
  • Letter of Interpretation on the recordability of
    motor vehicle accidents!

1904.39
23
Hazard Communication
  • 1926.59
  • Identical to 1910.1200
  • Conduct chemical inventory
  • Collect MSDSs
  • Identify chemicals/materials that fall under
    OSHAs Hazard Communication Standard
  • Physical Hazard
  • Health Hazard
  • Toxic
  • Carcinogenic
  • Written program
  • Employee Training
  • Labeling
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