First aid supplies that must be readily available
OSHA continues fining workplaces and contractors for failure to provide prompt first aid and medical services in the workplace. Often this is one of the first programs that an OSHA inspector will evaluate during an inspection, even when it’s not the primary focus of the inspection. First aid supplies and other medical services must be available at your workplace. The minimum OSHA requirements are:
- Medical personnel must be available for advice on occupational health matters.
- Make provisions for prompt medical attention in case of serious injury.
- An infirmary, clinic, hospital, or physician must be nearby, or someone trained in first aid must be available at the workplace.
- First aid supplies must be easy to get to.
- Having available means to transport an injured person to a physician or hospital.
- If 911 service is not available, the posting of emergency numbers for physicians, hospitals, and ambulances.
On-site medical treatment
The OSHA first aid and medical standards say prompt medical attention in case of serious injury must exist in the workplace. This means that when an injury or illness occurs, the maximum response time is fifteen minutes for less than serious injuries and within three to five minutes for serious injuries. OSHA currently recognizes this as appropriate for most cases.
However, assess conditions at each workplace while developing the first aid program. This ensures that fifteen minutes is adequate to meet all non-serious injury needs. Where a medical facility is near the workplace, OSHA rules require employers to provide the following:
- In areas where accidents resulting in suffocation, severe bleeding, or other life-threatening injury or illness can be expected, a three to four-minute response time necessary.
- In other circumstances, for instance, where a life-threatening injury is an unlikely outcome of an accident, a longer response time of up to fifteen minutes is acceptable.
- If you work in areas where emergency transportation is unavailable, your workplace must provide acceptable transportation. If arrangements cannot be made to provide emergency medical service within an appropriate timeframe, then a trained first aid person must be available for each shift.
Eyewash/Drenching stations
Employees must review the company’s Emergency Action Plan for first aid and medical services. It should outline everything they need to know to get help during a medical emergency. Where exposure to injurious corrosive materials may occur, suitable eyewash/drenching stations must be available at your workplace. These resources must be within 10 seconds or 55 feet of travel away from the source of exposure. The access route cannot be blocked either.
Key to remember
An OSHA inspector will evaluate whether or not your first aid supplies are readily available during an inspection, even when it’s not the primary focus of the inspection. Ensure your first aid supplies can be accessed promptly during a first aid event.