Draft:Outline of occupational safety and health
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to occupational safety and health:
Occupational safety and health (OSH) or occupational health and safety (OHS) is a multidisciplinary field concerned with the safety, health, and welfare of people at work (i.e., while performing duties required by one's occupation). OSH is related to the fields of occupational medicine and occupational hygiene and aligns with workplace health promotion initiatives. OSH also protects all the general public who may be affected by the occupational environment.
According to the official estimates of the United Nations, the WHO/ILO Joint Estimate of the Work-related Burden of Disease and Injury, almost 2 million people die each year due to exposure to occupational risk factors. Globally, more than 2.78 million people die annually as a result of workplace-related accidents or diseases, corresponding to one death every fifteen seconds. There are an additional 374 million non-fatal work-related injuries annually. It is estimated that the economic burden of occupational-related injury and death is nearly four per cent of the global gross domestic product each year. The human cost of this adversity is enormous.
General concepts
[edit]- Agricultural safety and health – Prevention of occupational hazards
- Chemical safety – Safety of activities involving chemicals
- Drug safety, also known as pharmacovigilence – Dubdiscipline of pharmacy relating to prevention of adverse effects of drugs
Break
[edit]- Construction safety (1 C, 7 P)
- Deaths from laboratory accidents (10 P)
- Electrical safety (3 C, 78 P)
- Environmental law (20 C, 52 P)
- Environmental toxicology (1 C, 19 P)
- Ergonomics (8 C, 75 P)
- Factory inspectors (11 P)
- Globally Harmonized System (4 P)
- Hazard analysis (17 P)
- Human reliability (11 P)
- Industrial accidents and incidents (13 C, 5 P)
- Industrial hygiene (46 P)
- Industrial safety devices (1 C, 6 P)
- Occupational safety and health journals (21 P)
- Laser safety and standards (7 P)
- Occupational safety and health law (1 C, 19 P)
- Members of Trinity House (18 P)
- Mine safety (3 C, 65 P)
- Occupational diseases (5 C, 58 P)
- Occupational hazards (11 P)
- Occupational health practitioners (4 C, 1 P)
- Occupational safety and health organizations (2 C, 70 P)
- Space medicine (2 C, 42 P)
- STDs in the sex industry (1 C, 6 P)
- Occupational therapy (3 C, 27 P)
- Toxicology (24 C, 184 P, 1 F)
Underwater diving safety
[edit]- Diving safety – Risk management of underwater diving activities
- Checklist – Aide-memoire to ensure consistency and completeness in carrying out a task
- Code of practice – Set of written rules which specifies how people working in a particular occupation should behave
- Dive team – A group of people working together to enhance dive safety and achieve a task
- Professional diving – Underwater diving where divers are paid for their work
- Diving supervisor – Professional diving team leader responsible for safety
- Stand-by diver – A member of a dive team who is ready to assist or rescue the working diver
- Bellman (diving) – The member of a dive team who acts as stand-by diver and tender from the diving bell
- Diver's attendant – Assistant for a diver
- Life support technician – A member of a saturation diving team who operates the surface habitat
- Chamber operator – A person who operates a diving chamber
- Diving systems technician – A competent person who maintains and repairs diving life-support equipment
- Divemaster – Recreational dive leader certification and role
- Diving hazards – Agents and situations that pose a threat to the underwater diver
- Silt out – Reduction of underwater visibility by disturbing silt deposits
- Task loading – Relationship between operator capacity and the accumulated activities that must be done
- Diver rescue – Rescue of a distressed or incapacitated diver
- Rescue Diver – Recreational scuba certification emphasising emergency response and diver rescue
- Doing It Right (scuba diving) – Technical diving safety philosophy
- Human factors in diving safety – The influence of physical, cognitive and behavioral characteristics of divers on safety
- Hazardous Materials Identification System – Numerical hazard rating using colour coded labels
- Occupational safety and health, also known as occupational health and safety – Field concerned with the safety, health and welfare of people at work
- Safety culture – Risk-averse attitudes
- Operations manual – Authoritative document of how things should be done in an organisation
- Emergency response plan – Action to be taken in specific emergencies
- Evacuation plan – Plan for removal of personnel from a high risk area or a developing incident to a safer place
- Standard operating procedure – Set of detailed instructions to assist in workplace safety
- Risk management – Identification, evaluation and control of risks
- Hazard identification and risk assessment
- Hazard analysis (HAZID) – Method for assessing risk
- Job safety analysis (JSA) – Procedure to integrate safety practices into a particular task
- Risk assessment – Estimation of risk associated with exposure to a given set of hazards
- Risk control – Process in which identified risks are reduced or mitigated
- Hierarchy of hazard controls – System used in industry to eliminate or minimize exposure to hazards
- Incident pit – Conceptual model for explaining incident development and recovery
- Lockout–tagout (LOTO) – Safe isolation of dangerous equipment during maintenance or testing
- Permit-to-work – Work safety management system
- Redundancy (engineering) – Duplication of critical components to increase reliability of a system
- Safety data sheet, also known as Material safety data sheet – Sheet listing work-related hazards of a product or substance
- Hazard identification and risk assessment
- Scuba diving fatalities – Deaths occurring while scuba diving or as a consequence of scuba diving
- Single point of failure – A part whose failure will disrupt the entire system
- Water safety – Human safety in the vicinity of bodies of water
Notable diving incidents and fatalities
[edit]- John Day (carpenter) – First recorded death in a diving chamber
- Edwin Clayton Link – Occupant of crewed sumersible who died in the Johnson Sea Link accident
- Charles Spalding – Scottish confectioner and amateur diving bell designer
- Ebenezer Watson – Diver killed in early Bell accident
- Professional diving incidents
- Roger Baldwin (diver) – Saturation diver killed in accident in the North Sea in 1975
- John Bennett (diver) – British technical diver and former record holder lost in commercial diving incident
- Victor F. Guiel Jr. – Saturation diver killed in the Wildrake diving accident
- Craig M. Hoffman – Diver killed in the Venture One diving accident
- Peter Henry Michael Holmes – Saturation diver killed in the Waage Drill II diving accident
- Gerard Anthony Prangley – Diver killed in offshore diving bell accident in 1978
- Pier Skipness – Diver killed in the Drill Master diving accident
- Robert John Smyth – Diver killed in diving bell accident off Norway in 1974
- Albert D. Stover – Diver killed in the Johnson Sea Link accident
- Richard A. Walker – Diver killed in the Wildrake diving accident
- Lothar Michael Ward – Diver killed in offshore diving bell accident in 1978
- Joachim Wendler – German aquanaut (1939–1975)
- Death of Bradley Westell – Fatal diving accident in the North Sea in 1995
- Arne Zetterström – Swedish diver and researcher (1917–1945)
- Scuba diving fatalities – Deaths occurring while scuba diving or as a consequence of scuba diving
- Ricardo Armbruster – Spanish ecologist, adventurer and entrepreneur [relevant?]
- David Bright (diver) – Wreck diver [relevant?]
- Berry L. Cannon – American aquanaut who died in a diving incident (1935–1969)
- Cotton Coulson – Photographer known for his work for National Geographic magazine
- E. Yale Dawson – American botanist and taxonomist
- Maurice Fargues – French navy diver and first scuba fatality using aqualung for a depth record attempt
- Steve Irwin – Australian zookeeper, conservationist and television personality (1962–2006)
- Henry Way Kendall – American particle physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Artur Kozłowski (speleologist) – Polish cave diver (1977–2011)
- Wesley C. Skiles – American cave diver and cinematographer
- Dewey Smith – American aquanaut. Died in diving accident.
- Rob Stewart (filmmaker) – Canadian photographer, filmmaker and conservationist
- Josef Velek – Czech journalist, author, and environmentalist (1939–1990)[relevant?]
United Kingdom
[edit]- Health and safety in the United Kingdom
- Electrical safety in the United Kingdom
- AC power plugs and sockets: British and related types – AC power plug type
- British Approvals Service for Cables
- British Electrotechnical Approvals Board – Electrical safety and certification organisation
- BS 546 – Class of British AC power plugs and sockets
- BS 1362 – Class of British AC power plugs and sockets
- BS 1363 – Type of British AC power plug and socket
- BS 4573 – Type of British AC power plug
- BS 7671 – British standard for electrical installations
- Electrical Safety First
- Energy and Utility Skills – UK trade association
- Caroline Haslett – British electrical engineer and electricity industry administrator, editor
- National Inspection Council for Electrical Installation Contracting
- Portable appliance testing – Procedure in which electrical appliances are routinely checked for safety
- SELECT (Electrical Contractors' Association of Scotland)
- Food safety in the United Kingdom
- 1900 English beer poisoning – Food safety crisis
- 1964 Aberdeen typhoid outbreak – Disease outbreak in Aberdeen, Scotland
- 2007 Bernard Matthews H5N1 outbreak – Avian influenza outbreak in United Kingdom in 2007
- Advisory Committee on Animal Feedingstuffs – Independent expert committee to Food Standards Agency
- Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food – UK advisory non-departmental public body sponsored by the Food Standards Agency
- Betts v Armstead – English case on product liability
- 1858 Bradford sweets poisoning – Mass arsenic poisoning in England
- Food Hygiene Rating (Wales) Act 2013 – Act of Senedd Cymru
- Food Safety Act 1990 – Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom
- Food Standards Agency – United Kingdom government non-ministerial department
- Food Standards Scotland – Food safety agency
- R v Dixon – English criminal law case
- R v Woodrow – 1846 English criminal law case
- SALSA (food standard) – British food standard
- Road safety in the United Kingdom
- Association of Certifying Factory Surgeons – Medical practitioners certifying children as fit to work
- British Occupational Hygiene Society – UK charity providing expertise on workplace health risks
- British Safety Council – Charitable organization in the occupational health and safety field
- Control of Asbestos Regulations 2006 – United Kingdom statotory legislation
- Control of Major Accident Hazards Regulations 2015 – United Kingdom health and safety legislation
- Control of Vibration at Work Regulations 2005 – United Kingdom health and safety legislation
- Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH) – United Kingdom health and safety legislation
- Cotton Mills and Factories Act 1819 – Act of Parliament regulating child work
- Factories Act 1847 – 1847 United Kingdom Act of Parliament
- Factories Act 1961 – United Kingdom health, safety and welfare legislation
- Factory Acts – UK laws on employment
- Factory and Workshop Act 1895 – United Kingdom legislation on working conditions
- Factory inspector – Regulatory official
- Firework Code – UK guidelines for the safe use of fireworks
- Food Safety Act 1990 – Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom
- Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998 – United Kingdom statutory legislation
- Green Guide – Guide to safety at sports grounds
- Health and Morals of Apprentices Act 1802 – United Kingdom health and welfare legislation
- Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 – United Kingdom statutory legislation
- Health and Safety Commission – UK non-departmental public body
- Health and safety crime in the United Kingdom – Crimes that arise from failure to take care of health, safety or welfare at work
- Health and Safety Executive – United Kingdom government agency
- Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland – Health body in Northern Ireland
- Health and Safety Laboratory – Agency of the Health and Safety Executive in the United Kingdom
- History of fire safety legislation in the United Kingdom
- Institution of Occupational Safety and Health – International professional organisation
- International Institute of Risk & Safety Management – Professional organization based in the UK
- Ionising Radiations Regulations 1999 – United Kingdom ealth and safety regulations
- Thomas Morison Legge – British physician
- Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment Regulations 1998 – UK Statutory Instrument 1998 No. 2307
- Mines and Collieries Act 1842 – British Mining law forbidding underground work by women
- National Examination Board in Occupational Safety and Health – UK-based examination board
- Offices, Shops and Railway Premises Act 1963 – Public General Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom
- Occupational Safety and Health Consultants Register (OSHCR) – British public register of consultants
- Personal Protective Equipment at Work Regulations 1992 – UK Statutory Instrument 1992 No. 2966
- Personal Track Safety – UK Safe Work Practices System
- Health and safety regulations in the United Kingdom
- Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations – United Kingdom legislation
- The Control of Noise at Work regulations 2005 – UK Statutory Instrument 2005 No. 1643
- UK Chemical Reaction Hazards Forum
- Her Majesty's Railway Inspectorate – British organisation responsible for railway and tramway safety
- Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 – UK Statutory Instrument 1992 No. 3004
- Electrical safety in the United Kingdom
Welding safety
[edit]- Welding safety
- Arc eye – Eye condition
- Hot work – processes that can be a source of ignition or a fire hazard
- Metal fume fever – illness caused by exposure to metal oxide fumes when heating e.g. zinc or aluminum.
- Photokeratitis – Eye condition
- Positive pressure enclosure – A chamber in which fresh air is pumped in to help remove dangerous fumes
- Welding goggles – Helmet that protects eyes during welding
- Welding helmet – Helmet that protects eyes during welding
Work-Life balance
[edit]- Work–life balance – Intersection of work and personal life
- Work–life balance by continent
- Parental leave by continent
- Parental leave in Europe
- Parental leave in the United Kingdom
- Additional Paternity Leave Regulations 2010 – United Kingdom labour law
- Equal Opportunities Commission v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry – Application for judicial review of implementation of equal opportunity legislation
- Maternity and Parental Leave, etc Regulations 1999 – United Kingdom labour law
- Paternity and Adoption Leave Regulations 2002 – United Kingdom labour law
- Statutory Maternity Pay – Form of parental leave in the United Kingdom
- Parental Leave Directive 2010 – European Union Directive (EU) 2010/18
- Parental leave in the United Kingdom
- Parental leave in North America
- Parental leave in the United States – Right to leave regulated by US labor law
- AT&T Corp. v. Hulteen – 2009 United States Supreme Court case
- California Federal Savings and Loan Association v. Guerra – 1987 United States Supreme Court case
- Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur – United States Supreme Court case
- Geduldig v. Aiello – 1974 equal protection United States Supreme Court case
- Maternity leave in the United States – Right to leave regulated by US labor law
- Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York – 1978 United States Supreme Court case
- Parental leave in the United States – Right to leave regulated by US labor law
- Parental leave in Europe
- Work–life balance in Europe
- Work–life balance in Germany – Overview of the work–life balance in Germany
- Work–life balance in North America
- Parental leave by continent
- Employee relationship management – information system to help relations between management and employees
- Happiness at work
- List of average annual labor hours in OECD countries
- Money-rich, time-poor
- Premium Friday – Japanese campaign promoting consumer spending
- Simple living – Simplified, minimalistic lifestyle
- Work–life balance by continent
Australia
[edit]- Workplace health and safety in Australia
- Comcare – Statutory authority of the Australian Government
- Industrial manslaughter – Crime where the action or inaction of an employer results in the death of an employee
- National Safety Council of Australia – Nonprofit organisation
- Occupational Health and Safety Act 2000 – Repealed statute of New South Wales, Australia
- Safe Work Australia – Government agency responsible for work health and safety
- Safety Institute of Australia
- Worksafe (Western Australia) – Government agency in Western Australia
- WorkSafe Victoria – Government agency of Victoria, Australia
To be sorted
[edit]- Occupational safety and health – Field concerned with the safety, health and welfare of people at work
- Total Recordable Incident Rate
- Administrative controls – Class of occupational hazard control
- Agricultural safety and health – Prevention of occupational hazards
- Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety
- American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine – American organization for people in occupational health
Asbestos
[edit]- Asbestos – Carcinogenic fibrous silicate mineral
- Asbestos and the law – Legal and regulatory issues involving the mineral asbestos
- Asbestos and the law (United States) – Law regarding the use of asbestos
- Asbestos-related diseases – Disorders of the lung and pleura caused by the inhalation of asbestos fibres
to be sorted 2
[edit]- Association of Certifying Factory Surgeons – Medical practitioners certifying children as fit to work
- Automated conveyor roller condition monitoring
- B reader – radiographer of pneumoconioses
- Basic Occupational Health Services – Application of primary health care principles in occupational health
- Benzene – Hydrocarbon compound
- Beryllium – chemical element with symbol Be and atomic number 4
- Bleed air – Aircraft gas turbine function
- Cadmium – chemical element with symbol Cd and atomic number of 48
- Canadian Registered Safety Professional – Board of Canadian Registered Safety Professionals certification
- Carbonless copy paper – Coated paper used for copying
- Causes of cancer – Genetic changes leading to uncontrolled cell growth and tumor formation
- Certified safety professional – Qualified safety personnel
- Chemical accident – Unintentional release of hazardous chemicals
- Chemical protective clothing – clothing used to protect against chemical hazards
- Chilean Safety Association – Chilean private non-profit corporation
- Chlorine – chemical element with symbol Cl and atomic number 17
- Chromium – chemical element with symbol Cr and atomic number 24
- Closed system drug transfer device
- CLP Regulation – 2008 European Union regulation about chemicals
- Code of safe working practices
- Community resilience – Concept in crisis management
- Compensation scheme for radiation-linked diseases – Workers compensation scheme
- Confined space – Space with limited entry and egress and not suitable for human inhabitants
- Construction site safety – Risk management at the workplace
- Control banding – Approach to promoting OHS
- Cytotoxic hazard symbol – Quality of being toxic to cells
- Dangerous Goods Safety Advisor
- Dead man's switch – Device that reacts to the loss of the operator
- Defensible space (fire control) – Natural or landscaped buffer to reduce fire danger
- Contact dermatitis – Inflammation from allergen or irritant exposure
- Diacetyl – chemical compound
- Diamond plate – Metal stock type
- 1,2-Dibromo-3-chloropropane – chemical compound
- Dry cleaning – Cleaning of fabrics in non-aqueous solvents
- Ear protection – topics referred to by the same term
- Earthquake preparedness – Set of measures taken to minimize the effects of an earthquake
- Effective safety training – An unofficial phrase used to describe the training materials designed to teach occupational safety and health standards developed by the United States government labor organization,
- Effects of overtime – Effects caused by overtime
- EHS Today – American trade magazine
- Electrical injury – Physiological reaction or injury caused by electric current
- Electrically conducting yarn – Any yarn that conducts electricity
- Emergency management – Dealing with all humanitarian aspects of emergencies
- Emergency Responder Health Monitoring and Surveillance
- Employee assistance program – Employee benefit program
- Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program
- Environment, health and safety – Balance of occupational safety and environmental protection
- Epidemiology data for low-linear energy transfer radiation – Epidemiological data regarding low-level radiation
- Ergonomic hazard – Physical conditions that may pose a risk of injury
- Ethylene oxide – Cyclic compound (C2H4O)
- Examinetics – Provider of mobile and on-site occupational health screening
- Exposure action value – A limit set on occupational exposure to noise where, when those values are exceeded, employers must take steps to monitor the exposure levels.
- Factories Act (Northern Ireland) 1965 – United Kingdom health, safety and welfare legislation
- Fall protection – Controls for workplace fall hazards
- Falling (accident) – Cause of injury or death
- Federal Coal Mine Safety Act of 1952 – US law
- First aid room – Room equipped and staffed for first aid
- Flame arrester – Device to Extinguish ignited flammable vapor
- Formaldehyde – Organic compound (H–CHO); simplest aldehyde
- Gas leak – Unintended escape of gas from a pipeline or other containment
- GESTIS Substance Database – German database on hazardous substances
- Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves – US-based non-profit organization
- Grain facility occupational exposure
- Guardian24
- Hazard analysis – Method for assessing risk
- Hazard symbol – Warning symbol on locations or products
- Hazards (magazine) – Magazine published in the UK
- Hazmat diving – Underwater diving in a known hazardous materials environment
- Healthy Entreprise
- Hearing conservation program – program to conserve hearing
- Hearing protection device – Protection device for auditory organs
- Herbert William Heinrich – American business writer
- Helicopter Underwater Escape Training
- Hexavalent chromium – Chromium in the +6 oxidation state
- Hierarchy of hazard controls – System used in industry to eliminate or minimize exposure to hazards
- Hot work – processes that can be a source of ignition or a fire hazard
- Human factors and ergonomics – Designing systems to suit their users
- Human Factors in Engineering and Design – Engineering textbook
- Donald Hunter (physician) – British doctor (1898-1978)
- Impact of nanotechnology
- Indicative limit value
- Indoor air quality – Air quality within and around buildings and structures
- Indoor Environmental Quality Global Alliance
- Inhalation exposure – major route of exposure that occurs when an individual breathes in polluted air which enters the respiratory tract
- Institut national de recherche et de sécurité
- Intratracheal instillation – Introduction of a substance directly into the trachea
- Job safety analysis – Procedure to integrate safety practices into a particular task
- Job strain – Form of psychosocial stress
- Job-exposure matrix – means of estimating a person's history of occupational exposure
- Jury stress – Physical and mental tension affecting juries
- Kissing the shuttle – Using the mouth to rethread a weaver's shuttle
- Kazutaka Kogi – Japanese academic (born 1933)
- Laboratory safety – Risks and prevention of laboratory accidents
- Joseph LaDou – American physician (1938–2023)
- Latex allergy – hypersensitivity reaction type I disease triggered by latex
- Lead – chemical element with symbol Pb and atomic number 82
- Lead safe work practices
- Pope Leo XIII – Head of the Catholic Church from 1878 to 1903
- Lift table bellows
- Light curtain – Opto-electronic safety device
- List of R-phrases – Standardised phrases specifying risks associated with substances
- List of S-phrases
- Lockout-tagout – Safe isolation of dangerous equipment during maintenance or testing
- LOLI Database – international chemical regulatory database
- Lone worker monitoring
- LTIFR – A measure of occupational safety
- Manganese – chemical element, symbol Mn and atomic number 25
- Manual handling of loads – Use of the human body to lift, lower, carry or transfer loads
- Maquila Decree
- Maslach Burnout Inventory
- Mercury (element) – chemical element with symbol Hg and atomic number 80
- Karen Messing – Canadian geneticist and ergonomist
- Micro-g environment – Zero apparent weight, microgravity
- Mine safety – Practice of controlling mining hazards
- Mining – Extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the Earth
- Indoor mold – Fungal growth that develops on wet materials
- Mold health issues – Harmful effects of molds
- Mr. Ouch – Symbol indicating electrical hazards
- National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety and Health
- National Agricultural Safety Database – Consisting 12 groups funded by NIOSH
- National Day of Mourning (Canadian observance) – annual observance in Canada (28 April) commemorates workers who have been killed, injured or suffered illness due to workplace-related hazards
- National Farm Safety & Health Week
- National Fire Fighter Near-Miss Reporting System
- Neil George Safety System – Safety self-assessment method
- North American Occupational Safety and Health Week
- Nutec – Norwegian company
- Occupational burnout – Type of occupational stress
- Occupational cardiovascular disease – disease of the heart and blood vessels caused by working conditions
- Occupational dust exposure – Occupational hazard in agriculture, construction, forestry, and mining
- Occupational epidemiology – Epidemiology of workplaces diseases
- Occupational exposure banding – Process to assign chemicals into categories corresponding to permissible exposure concentrations
- Occupational exposure limit – Upper limit on the acceptable concentration of a hazardous substance
- Occupational fatality – Death while performing a task
- Occupational health nursing – Nursing specialty
- Occupational health psychology – Health and Safety psychology
- Occupational hearing loss – Form of hearing loss
- Occupational heat stress – Net heat load of a worker
- Occupational hygiene – Management of workplace health hazards
- Occupational injury – Bodily damage resulting from working
- Occupational medicine – Medical specialty concerned with the maintenance of health in the workplace
- Occupational noise – noise encountered in the workplace
- Occupational rehabilitation – Occupation rehabilitation processes
- Occupational safety and health in Tanzania – Regulations that govern occupational safety and health in the country
- Occupational Safety and Health Professional Day
- Occupational skin diseases – Human skin diseases resulting from work activity
- Occupational stress – Tensions related to work
- Occupational toxicology – Toxiciology of substances found in workplaces
- Overwork – Excessive work
- Participatory ergonomics
- PAS 43 – British occupational safety standard
- Patient-initiated violence – Occupational hazard
- PEROSH – Science
- Person–environment fit – Compatibility of characteristics
- Personal protective equipment – Equipment designed to help protect an individual from hazards
- Pharyngeal aspiration
- Phenol-soluble modulin – Family of protein toxins
- PIACT – ILO project
- PIMEX
- Pointing and calling – Railway safety technique
- Police officer safety and health – Issues affecting the safety and health of police officers
- Portable appliance testing – Procedure in which electrical appliances are routinely checked for safety
- Positive psychology in the workplace
- Prevention through design – Reduction of occupational hazards by early planning in the design process
- Principles of motion economy – Set of rules and suggestions to improve the manual work in manufacturing
- Hearing loss – Partial or total inability to hear
- Quantitative risk assessment software
- Radiation dose reconstruction
- Radiation Exposure Compensation Act – US law
- Ramboll Environ – American consulting firm
- Respectful workplace
- Risk and Safety Statements – System of hazard codes and phrases for labeling dangerous chemicals and compounds
- Risk Information Exchange – Database for chemical risk assessments
- Robens Report – British trade unionist, industrialist and politician
- Rope access – Form of industrial climbing
- Safe Work Procedure
- Safeguard (magazine)
- Safety data sheet – Sheet listing work-related hazards of a product or substance
- Safety Jackpot
- Safety statement – Document that outlines how a company manages their health and safety
- Send for Help Group
- SENSOR-Pesticides – US States watching for illness and injury
- Seoul Declaration on Safety and Health at Work – Declaration perpetuating national preventative safety and health culture
- Sheri Sangji case – Legal action resulting from an academic laboratory accident
- Sifa – dead-man's vigilance device used in trains
- Sleeping while on duty – Falling asleep while working
- Software safety classification
- Specific inhalation challenge
- STDs in the porn industry – Occupational safety and health issue in the sex industry
- Sterilant gas monitoring
- Samuel Stockhausen – German physician of the 17th century
- Substitution of dangerous chemicals – Hazardous chemical reduction strategies
- Thermal work limit
- Threshold limit value – Upper limit on the acceptable exposure concentration of a hazardous substance in the workplace
- Total Worker Health – Management strategy for worker wellbeing
- Voluntary Protection Program – Safety management program administered by OSHA in the US
- Water safety – Human safety in the vicinity of bodies of water
- Wellbeing at Work conference
- Wet-bulb globe temperature – Apparent temperature estimating how humans are affected
- Wildfire – Uncontrolled fires in forests or open spaces
- Wildfire suppression – Firefighting tactics used to suppress wildfires
- Work accident – Occurrence during work that leads to physical or mental harm
- Work improvement in small enterprises – Practical programme
- Work method statement – document that gives specific instructions on how to safely perform a work related task, or operate a piece of plant or equipment
- Work-related road safety in the United States
- Worker Protection Standard
- Worker road safety
- Workers' Memorial Day – Commemoration day
- Workers’ right to access restroom
- Workplace revenge – Type of workplace bullying
- Workplace Safety and Health Council
- Workplace safety and health in Singapore
- Workplace violence – Assault, abuse or threat that occurs in the workplace
- Workplace wellness – Healthy behavior in the workplace
- Young worker safety and health