S+H Staff

Tips for eating healthy when money is tight

Heading to the grocery store? MyPlate.gov has tips to help you get the most out of your money while making healthy choices.

Not your ordinary ice

If you’ve ever ordered or received a gift of meat, ice cream or other perishable food from an online company, it may have been shipped with dry ice.

Learn more about OSHA’s ‘Beat the Heat’ contest

Washington — OSHA has scheduled a free webinar on its Beat the Heat contest.

NSC traffic safety grants aimed at producing ‘lifesaving outcomes’

Itasca, IL — The National Safety Council has announced the recipients of the 2023 Road to Zero Community Traffic Safety Grants.
- Digital Partner -

California bill seeks to extend OSHA protections to domestic workers

Sacramento, CA — New legislation in California would allow the state’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health to issue workplace safety rules for private households employing domestic workers.

EPA has advice for curbing kids’ exposure to hazardous heavy metals

Don’t simply get the lead out. Keep it out. And move on from mercury, too. A recently published resource from the Environmental Protection Agency is aimed at lowering children’s exposure to hazardous heavy metals in community settings.

Kids in hot cars – help prevent a tragedy

Even on cloudy days, the heat trapped inside your vehicle can reach life-threatening temperatures – and leaving the windows open doesn’t help. This means that no child should ever be left alone inside a vehicle.

Washington state law aimed at protecting highway workers from speeders

Olympia, WA — A new law in Washington state allows the use of speed safety cameras in highway work zones in an effort to protect roadway workers.
- Digital Partner -

Menopause symptoms cost billions in lost work time, researchers say

Jacksonville, FL — Around $28.4 billion. That’s what researchers estimate is the combined annual cost of lost work time and medical expenses related to menopause symptoms.

Discrimination at work may be hard on the heart

Los Angeles — Workers who experience discrimination on the job may be more likely to develop high blood pressure, results of a recent study show.

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