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OSHA Injury and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements Home
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    • Injury & Illness Recordkeeping Forms 300, 300A, 301
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    • Does OSHA provide training for the general public on recordkeeping requirements?

Use key words to search Q & As on OSHA's injury and illness recordkeeping requirements for employers. From this page you can search a repository of questions and answers from the regulation rule itself as well as from requests for information submitted to the Agency. Simply type any key word(s) into the input field below, then select the Search button to view a list of resulting questions that link to answers. If a search on this page does not answer your question, you can submit your question using OSHA's e-correspondence form.

Search Basics and Hints

Search Basics and Hints:

This search function only returns exact matches from the Question and Answer text. For example, a search on the work 'truck' will return Q & A with the word 'truck' or 'trucking' or 'struck' in them. A search on the word 'truck' with a space in front and behind will only return Q & A with the work 'truck' in it.

If your search does not provide the question and answer you are looking for, try alternative words that may be in found in similar situations. For example, if you search 'cat bite' and find nothing, try 'dog bite' or 'animal bite' instead. Or narrow the search to just 'bite' and see what you get. Also try 'sting' for similar Q & A.

Note: Unless the search results indicate that the source for the Q & A is the recordkeeping rule (29 CFR 1904), the Q & As presented do not themselves impose enforceable recordkeeping or reporting obligations, since such obligations are imposed only by the regulation.

Results: 125 records found

Q: How does an employer inform each employee on how he or she is to report an injury or illness?

A:

Employers are required to let employees know how and when to report work-related injuries and illnesses. This means that the employer must set up a way for the employees to report work-related injuries and illnesses and tell its employees how to use it. The Recordkeeping rule does not specify how the employer must accomplish these objectives, so employers have flexibility to set up systems that are appropriate to their workplace. The size of the workforce, employee's language proficiency and literacy levels, the workplace culture, and other factors will determine what will be effective for any particular workplace.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 35-1

Source: FAQs


Q: How does OSHA define a "company parking lot" for purposes of Recordkeeping?

A:

Company parking lots are part of the employer's premises and therefore part of the establishment. These areas are under the control of the employer, i.e. those parking areas where the employer can limit access (such as parking lots limited to the employer's employees and visitors). On the other hand, a parking area where the employer does not have control (such as a parking lot outside of a building shared by different employers, or a public parking area like those found at a mall or beneath a multi-employer office building) would not be considered part of the employers establishment (except for the owner of the building or mall), and therefore not a company parking lot for purposes of OSHA recordkeeping.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 5-10

Source: FAQs


Q: How is an employer to determine whether an employee has "recovered completely" from a previous injury or illness such that a later injury or illness of the same type affecting the same part of the body resulting from an event or exposure at work is a "new case" under section 1904.6(a)(2)? If an employee's signs and symptoms disappear for a day and then resurface the next day, should the employer conclude that the later signs and symptoms represent a new case?

A:

An employee has "recovered completely" from a previous injury or illness, for purposes of section 1904.6(a)(2), when he or she is fully healed or cured. The employer must use his best judgment based on factors such as the passage of time since the symptoms last occurred and the physical appearance of the affected part of the body. If the signs and symptoms of a previous injury disappear for a day only to reappear the following day, that is strong evidence the injury has not properly healed. The employer may, but is not required to, consult a physician or other licensed health care provider (PLHCP). Where the employer does consult a PLHCP to determine whether an employee has recovered completely from a prior injury or illness, it must follow the PLHCP's recommendation. In the event the employer receives recommendations from two or more PLHCPs, the employer may decide which recommendation is the most authoritative and record the case based on that recommendation.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 6-1

Source: FAQs


Q: How is the term "supervised" in section 1904.31 defined for the purpose of determining whether the host employer must record the work-related injuries and illnesses of employees obtained from a temporary help service?

A:

The host employer must record the recordable injuries and illnesses of employees not on its payroll if it supervises them on a day-to-day basis. Day-to-day supervision occurs when "in addition to specifying the output, product or result to be accomplished by the person's work, the employer supervises the details, means, methods and processes by which the work is to be accomplished."

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 31-1

Source: FAQs


Q: How long must a modification to a job last before it can be considered a permanent modification under section 1904.7(b)(4)(xi)?

A:

Section 1904.7(b)(4)(xi) of the rule allows an employer to stop counting days of restricted work or transfer to another job if the restriction or transfer is made permanent. A permanent restriction or transfer is one that is expected to last for the remainder of the employee's career. Where the restriction or transfer is determined to be permanent at the time it is ordered, the employer must count at least one day of the restriction or transfer on the Log. If the employee whose work is restricted or who is transferred to another job is expected to return to his or her former job duties at a later date, the restriction or transfer is considered temporary rather than permanent.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 7-12

Source: FAQs


Q: How many calendar days are to be counted in the case of a work-related fatal injury or illness?

A:

None. Employers are required to record a case based on the most severe outcome, so even where an employee has sustained days away from work before that employee dies, the fatality would be the most severe outcome. In the case of a work-related fatality, enter a checkmark in column G (death) on the Form 300.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 7-28

Q: How may state regulations differ from the Federal requirements?

A:

For Part 1904 provisions other than recording and reporting, State requirements may be more stringent than or supplemental to the Federal requirements. For example, a State Plan could require employers to keep records for the State, even though those employers have 10 or fewer employees (1904.1) or are within an industry exempted by the Federal rule. A State Plan could also require employers to keep additional supplementary injury and illness information, require employers to report fatality and severe injury incidents within a shorter time frame than Federal OSHA does (1904.39), require other types of incidents to be reported as they occur, require hearing loss to be recorded at a lower threshold level during CY 2002 (1904.10(c)), or impose other requirements.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 37-2

Source: FAQs


Q: How would I go about finding an experience modification number for a company?

A:

The Experience Modification Rate (EMR) is a rate assigned by your worker's compensation insurance carrier. Please contact your carrier for this information.

FAQ ID: 74

Source: OSHA e-correspondence


Q: How would the employer record the change on the OSHA 300 Log for an injury or illness after the injured worker reached the cap of 180 days for restricted work and then was assigned to "days away from work"?

A:

The employer must check the box that reflects the most severe outcome associated with a given injury or illness. The severity of any case decreases on the log from column G (Death) to column J (Other recordable case). Since days away from work is a more severe outcome than restricted work the employer is required to remove the check initially placed in the box for job transfer or restriction and enter a check in the box for days away from work (column H). Employers are allowed to cap the number of days away and/or restricted work/job transfer when a case involves 180 calendar days. For purposes of recordability, the employer would enter 180 days in the "Job transfer or restriction" column and may also enter 1 day in the "Days away from work" column to prevent confusion or computer related problems.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

FAQ ID: 7-18

Source: FAQs


Q: I am going to be taking over the Workman's Comp. claims in our office. Are there training manuals and forms that you can send me?

A:

OSHA does not administer workers compensation programs. Each state runs its own program. OSHA does have injury and illness recordkeeping requirements that can be found at this link on the website http://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping/index.html

FAQ ID: 36

Source: OSHA e-correspondence


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