Skip to content

Incident Investigation

$399.99

Workers, both indoors and outdoors, in services, transportation, agriculture, construction, and other industries may be exposed to incidents that if misused can lead to severe injuries, or death. There are factors that can cause the employee to be more at risk. This training helps to identify factors that can cause harm to the employee and potentially save lives.

SKU: N/A Categories: ,

Sub-Title:
Certification for General Duty Clause, Section 5(a)(1) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, OSHA’s Incident Investigation guidance, Root Cause Analysis

Who Needs this Training?

According to OSHA All employees working in these areas:

  • Those who work on jobsites and may witness an incident.
  • Workers that may be involve in an incident,
  • Those that train or modify training due to incidents.
  • Those that are new to the jobsite.

Dangers of Remaining Uncertified

Worksites can be very dangerous. It is important to recognize an incident, document the incident, investigate, and learn from incidents.

Without proper training:

You will not know how to document the incident

Won’t understand the importance of properly fill out witness statements.

You will not be able to learn from the situation, so the incident does not happen again

Included Topics
By the end of this course we will have covered the following topics:

 

Introduction-1:06

Topic 1 Introduction to Incident Investigation-4:20
Topic 2 Incident Preperation-1:19
Topic 3 Visiting the Scene-4:10
Topic 4 Interviewing the Witnesses-2:54
Topic 5 Analyzing the Evidence -1:58
Topic 6 Writing the Report-2:56
Topic 7 Conclusion-3:11

 

Summary-0:16

 

Course Layout
Course format consists of video instruction, intermediate quizzes, and Final Knowledge Check

Course Duration
A minimum of 45 minutes is required to complete this course.

Recertification
When an employer has reason to believe that an affected worker does not recognize existing hazards or proper precautions at some point after the initial training, the employer is required to provide retraining for that worker, in accordance with 29 CFR 1926 and 29 CFR 1910. For example, workers must be retrained when:

  • Changes in the workplace render previous training obsolete.
  • Incidents occur on site.
  • Inadequacies in workers’ knowledge or hazard precautions indicate that they do not adequately understand training.

 

Certificate of Completion
A completion certificate is available for printing immediately upon successfully finishing the course.

Incident Investigation

English, Spanish

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.