Recordable or not? Virtual conference summary and knowledge check
How well do you know OSHA’s injury recordkeeping rules? We recently hosted a virtual conference that offered a “recordable or not?” quiz to test attendees’ knowledge about OSHA 300 recordkeeping. Take the quiz below to test your own knowledge!
The one-hour event on March 14, 2024, began with an overview of OSHA’s injury recordkeeping requirements. OSHA presumes that any incident at work is work-related, with some very narrow exceptions.
However, a work-related injury doesn’t mean the employer was at fault and doesn’t mean the employer could have prevented the injury. For example, if an employee trips while walking on a smooth factory floor, any resulting injury is work-related simply because it happened in the work environment, even if no identifiable hazard caused the trip.
The presumption applies to injuries in the “work environment,” so understanding that term is crucial. It includes company property and other locations where employees are “present as a condition of their employment.” For instance, if a plumber gets hurt while on a customer site, that would be work-related. The work environment includes company parking lots, even before employees punch in, since they are present for the job.
Test yourself!
The following eight questions came from letters of interpretation, frequently asked questions, or OSHA’s regulations. Answer yes or no, then look below for the answers.
- An employee gets injured at work, sees a doctor, and is given an over-the-counter medication. While doing yard work at home that weekend, the injury got worse and the employee now needs restrictions at work that limit his routine job functions. Is this recordable as a restricted work case?
- An employee traveling for work checks into a hotel, but falls in hotel room shower, gets injured, and needs medical treatment. Is this work-related and recordable?
- Due to a workplace injury, an employee cannot use his left arm for one week but can still perform all duties, just more slowly. Is this recordable as a restricted work case?
- Two employees get in an argument in the parking lot before work. One pulls a knife and stabs the other, requiring sutures. Is this work-related and recordable?
- An employee brushing snow off her car at the end of the workday twists an ankle, needing a rigid brace (medical treatment). Is this work-related and recordable?
- During an unpaid lunch break, an employee who stayed on company property steps outside for a smoke break. He slips on ice and gets injured, needing medical treatment. Is this work-related and recordable?
- An employee on restrictions due to a work-related injury must occasionally take a day off to attend follow-up appointments with the doctor. Are those absences considered days away?
- An employee gets struck in the mouth by an object at work, damaging their dentures, but has no other injury. Is this recordable?
After jotting down your answers or making mental notes, see how OSHA responded.
The answers
Check your answers to see how many you got correct.
- Yes, this is recordable as restricted work. Although restrictions were necessary only because of the non-work activity, the employee might not have needed restrictions if not for the workplace incident. See: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2021-03-17-1
- No, this is not work-related. Employees who check in to a hotel room have left the work environment. See 1904.5(b)(6)
- No, a loss of productivity is not restricted work, if the employee still performs all routine job functions. See https://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping/faq-search and search the term “left arm.”
- Yes, this is work-related. A company parking lot is part of the work environment. OSHA does not provide any exceptions for workplace violence. See: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2009-02-09
- Yes, this is work-related. Brushing snow off the car is not a personal task, and the employee is present as a condition of the job. See https://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping/faq-search and search for “snow.”
- Yes, this is work-related. OSHA considers breaks and meal periods (even if unpaid) to be within assigned working hours. See: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2005-03-10
- No. If the absence was only to make time for the appointment (not because the severity of the injury required time off) it does not count as days away. See: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2005-11-30
- No, this is not recordable because there was no injury to a body part. Damage to dentures or prosthetic devices are not injuries. See: https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2007-04-03
We hope you enjoyed the quiz! If you’d like to download a copy of the presentation slides, click here.