safety hazard: causes external harm (broken leg, sprained wrist) health hazard: causes disease.
EX. Safety hazard is like not smoking around certain chemical carrying equipment (ie storage tanks) health hazard is not smoking in restaurants or other public areas.
A hazard in the health and safety context is a material, condition, or circumstance that has the potential for causing injury, illness or death in people or damage to property.
There is no fundamental difference between a person designated as a "health and safety representative" and one designated a "representative of employees safety" - unless a specific employer or organization assigns differing responsibilities to the two.
health and safety officer.
There is no difference between "workplace health and safety" and "occupational health and safety." They are two terms for the same concept. What ever term you use in your business or the company that you are going to join, either of them aims to promote and ensure the health and safety of everyone. Different places have different administering agencies for them like in the USA, OSHA or Occupational Safety and Health Administration takes care of the health and safety of not just workers and supervisors but all people that may be involved in the workplace process (even clients/customers)
By conducting a health and safety risk assessment. By ensuring any health and safety instructions are followed.
Reliability: It works as expected.Safety: It doesn't endanger your life or health.
OSHA stands for any of the following, and many more:Occupational Safety and Health Administration (US)Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970Occupational Safety and Health Association (Hong Kong)Oregon Speech and Hearing Association (Salem, OR)On-Site Hazard AnalysisOperation & Support Hazard Analysis
Finding foreign objects in food served anywhere is a health and safety hazard.
There is no organization called "Occupational Safety and Hazard Administration" Most likely the questioner is thinking of the "Occupational Safety and Health Administration," a US Federal agency in the Department of Labor that is responsible for issuing regulations on health and safety in the workplace and for inspecting workplaces for compliance with those regulations.
There is no essential difference between the meanings of the phrases "essential to safety" and "essential for safety."
There is a deal of overlap between hygiene and safety in general and therefore between hygiene and safety hazards. Broadly, a safety hazard is one for which the result is promptly noticeable and readily identifiable as to the proximate cause. For example, falling off a ladder, and the resulting injuries, are readily seen to be connected. With a hygiene hazard, the exposure to the hazard and the resulting injury may be separated in time and the cause and effect may not be as readily apparent. For example, exposure to benzene vapor can result in liver cancer, but it takes a study of many people over a long time to clearly demonstrate that.
to report any hazard to the approprite authority