The OSHA 300 is for recording both injuries and work-related . If it is neither an injury nor an illness, then it is of no interest to OSHA in terms of the 300 form
The log of occupational injuries and illnesses is now kept on OSHA Form 300, not form 200.
The OSHA 300 is the "Log of work-related injuries and illnesses". This is the form that an employer would use to record all the employee injuries/illnesses as they occur throughout a year. The nature of the injury/illness is also recorded. There is no OSHA 400.
The OSHA 300 form is a summary log in which the number of recordable injuries and illnesses (and the lost days associated with them) are summarized for each workplace. The summary must be certified by a company executive and posted from 1 Feb through 30 April in each workplace at a location were it will be seen by entering employees.
OSHA 300 and 301
OSHA 300
If 75mg diclofenac is a prescription medication and if it is given because of a workplace related condition, the condition may be an OSHA recordable event. Consult a specialist familiar with OSHA recording requirements and with the specifics of the situation. NEVER rely upon the information provided in a site like this one to determine whether to record an event on OSHA 300 form
The OSHA 300 log is a log of all work related injuries that result in loss of consciousness, days off of work, and medical treatment beyond first aid.
Beginning in 2005 federal agencies were required to maintain OSHA 300 logs and report the findings to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
occupation health and safety association
No. Worker's Compenstation is completely separate form OSHA. Worker's Compensation is run by each state under its own legislation. OSHA is a US Federal Agency.
Yes. There is a persistent myth that employers with 10 or fewer employees are exempt for OSHA standards. Except for small family farms, there IS no blanket exemption. Small employers ARE partially exempt from SOME OSHA standards, such as the OSHA 300 recordkeeping.