Who falls under this regulation?
Employers with 11 or more employees at any time during the prior calendar year unless industry code is listed on the Partial Exempt List.
When?
Work related injury and illness should be logged on the OSHA 300 within 7 days of knowledge
Deadlines: Feb 1, 2021
You will be required to post only the 2020 Summary 300a form from Feb 1st through April 30th.
Forms Required:
Employers that are required to maintain Injury and Illness records will need three forms:
- the Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses (OSHA Form 300),
- the Summary of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses (OSHA Form 300A), and
- the Injury and Illness Incident Report (OSHA Form 301 or Workers Comp First Report of Injury C2/eFroi).
Instructions:
Watch this 15 min video for a tutorial on completing the Recordkeeping Forms.
Things to Consider:
What type of Injuries or Illnesses are NOT recordable:
- Employee presented as a member of the general public
- Symptoms arising in work environment that are solely due to non-work-related event or exposure, (regardless of where signs or symptoms surface) a case is work-related only if a work event or exposure is a discernable cause of the injury or illness or of a significant aggravation to a pre-existing condition.
- Voluntary participation in wellness program, medical, fitness or recreational activity
- Eating, drinking or preparing food or drink for personal consumption
- Personal tasks outside assigned working hours
- Personal grooming, self medication for non-work-related condition, or intentionally self-inflicted
- Common cold or flu
- Mental illness, unless employee voluntarily provides a medical opinion from a physician or licensed health care professional (PLHCP) having appropriate qualifications and experience that affirms work-relatedness
- Visits to a licensed physician solely for observation or counseling
- Diagnostic procedures including x-rays, MRIs, CT scan
- If no lost time and treatment is not beyond following First Aid List
- Using nonprescription medication at nonprescription strength
- Tetanus immunizations
- Cleaning, flushing, or soaking surface wounds
- Wound coverings, butterfly bandages, Steri-Strips
- Hot or cold therapy
- Non-rigid means of support
- Temporary immobilization device used to transport accident victims
- Drilling of fingernail or toenail, draining fluid from blister
- Eye patches
- Removing foreign bodies from eye using irrigation or cotton swab
- Removing splinters or foreign material from areas other than the eye by irrigation, tweezers, cotton swabs or other simple means
- Finger guards
- Massages
- Drinking fluids for relief of heat stress
Special Consideration:
Travel:
- An injury or illness that occurs while an employee is on travel status is work-related if it occurred while the employee was engaged in work activities in the interest of the employer, otherwise it is not recordable
- Detour for personal reasons is not work-related
Work from Home:
Injuries and illnesses that occur while an employee is working at home are work-related if they:
- occur while the employee is performing work for pay or compensation in the home, and
- are directly related to the performance of work rather than the general home environment
Day counts (days away or days restricted)
-
- Do not count day of injury/illness
- Count the number of calendar days the employee was unable to work (include weekend days, holidays, vacation days, etc.)
- Cap day count at 180 days away and/or days restricted
- May stop day count if employee leaves company for a reason unrelated to the injury or illness
- If a medical opinion exists, employer must follow that opinion
- Logs are to be completed within 7 days of the injury/illness
Incident Rate Calculation – Total number of injuries & illnesses multiplied by 200,000
divided by number of hours worked by all employees = total recordable case rate
For more info please visit OSHA.gov or call your Keevily Team.