
CCOHS: Hazard and Risk - General
Aug 28, 2025 · Identify hazards and risk factors that have the potential to cause harm (hazard identification). Analyze and evaluate the risk associated with that hazard (risk analysis, and risk …
CCOHS: Hazards
Mar 6, 2026 · Hazards There are many types of hazards - chemical, ergonomic, physical, and psychosocial, to name a few - which can cause harm or adverse effects in the workplace. Get …
Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards | NIOSH | CDC
The NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards (NPG) informs workers, employers, and occupational health professionals about workplace chemicals and their hazards. The NPG gives general industrial …
An Urgent Call to Address Work-related Psychosocial Hazards and …
Apr 10, 2024 · Summary: Work-related psychosocial hazards are on the verge of surpassing many other occupational hazards in terms of their contribution to poor health, injury, disability, and costs. A new …
Electrical Safety in the Workplace | Electrical Safety | CDC
Feb 14, 2024 · Hazards, injury data, high-risk industries, and recommendations on electrical safety at work.
About Hierarchy of Controls | Hierarchy of Controls | CDC
Apr 10, 2024 · The hierarchy of controls identifies a preferred order of actions to best control hazardous workplace exposures. Elimination, substitution, and engineering controls are more effective because …
CCOHS: Hazard and Risk - Hazard Identification
May 4, 2018 · Identify hazards and risk factors that have the potential to cause harm (hazard identification). Analyze and evaluate the risk associated with that hazard (risk analysis, and risk …
Practical Strategies to Manage AI Hazards in the Workplace
Jan 18, 2026 · Understanding workplace AI hazards This summer, The Synergist 's June/July 2025 issue featured NIOSH-funded research in the article "You vs. the Robot Factory: Some Principles for …
Natural Disasters and Severe Weather | Natural Disasters | CDC
Protect your health before, during, and after natural disasters.
Chlorine | Chemical Emergencies | CDC
Sep 6, 2024 · Chlorine can explode or create explosive products with many common substances. They include: acetylene, ether, turpentine, ammonia, fuel gas, hydrogen, and finely divided metals.