OSHA lists most common COVID-19-related violations

Washington — OSHA has published an overview of its most common COVID-19-related citations – and a reminder of employer requirements.

According to a Nov. 6 agency press release, the General Duty Clause is among the standards most frequently cited during coronavirus-related inspections, while the others involve respiratory protection (1910.134), personal protective equipment (1910.132), and injury and illness recordkeeping and reporting (Subpart 1904).

In a separate one-page document, OSHA lists several requirements employers should remember, including:

  • Provide a medical evaluation before a worker is fit tested or uses a respirator.
  • Establish, implement and update a written respiratory protection program with required worksite-specific procedures.
  • Educate workers on how to safely use respirators and/or other PPE, and inform them of changes in the workplace that could make previous training obsolete.
  • Store respirators and other PPE properly, in a way that protects them from damage, contamination, and, where applicable, deformation of the facepiece and exhalation valve.
  • Keep records of work-related fatalities, injuries and illnesses.

 

Both guidance documents include a link to OSHA’s free, confidential On-Site Consultation Program as well as information on the agency’s temporary enforcement discretion policy during the pandemic.

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“By understanding which workplace hazards have most often resulted in OSHA citations, employers can better ensure that they are adequately protecting workers,” the agency states.

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