Recordkeeping: To record or not to record?
On January 9, 2023, OSHA published a News Release reminding employers to submit their recordable injury and illness data electronically by March 2, 2023.
Since January 1, 2002, employers across the nation have been recording work–related injuries and illnesses according to the provisions of OSHA’s recordkeeping rule. While not all employers must keep records of workplace injuries and illnesses, an estimated 1.5 million currently do.
If your company is one of those covered by the rule, you must understand how and when to record employee injuries and illnesses. Just as important, you need to know what not to record because unnecessary recording can skew your incidence rate and may result in lost contracts and OSHA inspections.
Is it work-related?
You must first determine if the case is work-related to discern what injuries and illness to record or not. Work-relatedness is presumed for all injuries and illnesses resulting from events or exposures occurring in the work environment, unless one of the exceptions under the rule applies (see below). It is considered work-related if an event or exposure in the work environment either causes or contributes to the injury or illness or significantly aggravates a pre-existing injury or illness.
In some cases, this determination can be difficult. For example, musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) are work-related. However, MSDs can and do develop outside the workplace. Determining whether any particular MSD is work-related may require using different approaches tailored to specific workplace conditions and exposures.
Establishing the work-relatedness of an uncertain case may include the following:
- Taking a careful history of the patient and the illness;
- Conducting a thorough medical examination; and
- Characterizing factors on and off the job that may have caused or contributed to the injury or illness.
Exceptions: Non-recordable situations
Work-relatedness is presumed for injuries and illnesses resulting from events or exposures occurring in the workplace — except under the following circumstances, which are not recordable:
- The employee was present as a member of the general public (rather than as an employee) at the time of the injury or illness;
- Signs or symptoms surface at work but are caused solely by a non-work related event or exposure (e.g., a seizure caused by epilepsy);
- Voluntary participation in a wellness program or a medical, fitness, or recreational activity (e.g., blood donation);
- Eating, drinking, or preparing food or drink for personal consumption, whether bought on the employer’s premises or brought in by the employee (this exception does not apply to food provided by the employer for company functions);
- Conducting personal tasks that are unrelated to an employee’s job and the activity is outside of assigned work hours;
- The result of personal grooming, self-medication for a non-work-related condition, or intentionally self-inflicted (e.g., allergic reaction to a personal medication);
- Vehicle accident in a company parking lot or company access road while the employee is commuting to or from work;
- Common cold or flu; and
- Mental illness unless the employee voluntarily provides an opinion from a physician or licensed health care professional stating that they have a work-related mental illness.
If a case doesn’t meet one of these nine exceptions, it is work-related under the recordkeeping rule. Be aware that workers’ compensation may use a different definition. An injury can be work-related and recordable even though your workers’ compensation carrier may deny it.
Record each recordable injury or illness on the 300 Log and 301 Incident Report within seven calendar days of receiving information that the injury or illness has occurred. In most instances, you will know immediately, or within a short time, that a recordable case has occurred. Sometimes, however, it may be several days before you find out that an employee’s injury or illness meets recordable criteria. Remember to post your logs at your workplace from February 1st – April 30th.
Key to remember
You must first determine if the case is work-related to discern what injuries and illness to record or not. Each recordable work-related injury or illness must be recorded on the 300 Log and 301 Incident Report within seven calendar days of receiving information that the injury or illness has occurred.