top of page
Tamkene Wide Logo .png

Hazard Recognition and Control Training Service | in Dammam - Riyadh - Jeddah - Makkah

Hazard Recognition & Control training per OSHA and ANSI Z10, covering hazard ID, risk assessment, and Hierarchy of Controls implementation.

Course Title

Hazard Recognition and Control

Course Duration

1 Day

Competency Assessment Criteria

Practical Assessment and Knowledge Assessment

Training Delivery Method

Classroom (Instructor-Led) or Online (Instructor-Led)

Service Coverage

Saudi Arabia - Bahrain - Kuwait - Philippines

Course Average Passing Rate

97%

Post Training Reporting 

Post Training Report(s) + Candidate(s) Training Evaluation Forms

Certificate of Successful Completion

Certification is provided upon successful completion. The certificate can be verified through a QR-Code system.

Certification Provider

Tamkene Saudi Training Center - Approved by TVTC (Technical and Vocational Training Corporation)

Certificate Validity

2 Years (Extendable with additional training hours)

Instructors Languages

English / Arabic / Urdu / Hindi / Pashto

Training Services Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Services Design Methodology (1).png

Course Overview

This comprehensive Hazard Recognition and Control training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for identifying workplace hazards and implementing effective control measures. The course covers fundamental hazard recognition principles along with critical techniques for risk assessment, control selection, and hazard mitigation aligned with OSHA General Industry and Construction standards, ANSI/ASSP Z10 Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems, NIOSH guidelines, and the Hierarchy of Controls framework.


Participants will learn to apply systematic hazard identification methods and proven control strategies to eliminate or minimize workplace risks. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical applications and workplace scenarios to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing proactive hazard management and injury prevention.

Key Learning Objectives

  • Understand hazard types and workplace risk factors

  • Apply systematic hazard identification and recognition techniques

  • Conduct workplace inspections and job hazard analysis

  • Assess risk using likelihood and severity criteria

  • Apply Hierarchy of Controls for hazard mitigation

  • Select and implement appropriate control measures

  • Verify control effectiveness and maintain safeguards

  • Foster proactive hazard reporting and safety culture

Group Exercises

  • Collaborative facility hazard hunt based on Middle East workplace scenarios including (team inspection, hazard identification competition, control brainstorming, presentation)

  • JHA team development including (selecting high-risk task, collaborative task breakdown, group hazard identification, consensus on controls)

  • The importance of proper training in developing hazard recognition skills that prevent injuries and create safer workplaces

Knowledge Assessment

  • Technical quizzes on hazard types including (multiple-choice questions categorizing hazards, true/false on OSHA requirements, matching hazards to controls)

  • Hierarchy of Controls application including (ranking control measures by effectiveness, selecting appropriate controls for scenarios, explaining selection rationale)

  • Risk assessment exercises including (determining likelihood and severity for scenarios, plotting on risk matrix, prioritizing actions)

  • Hazard recognition scenarios including (identifying hazards from workplace photos, categorizing hazard types, recommending controls)

Course Outline

1. Introduction to Hazard Recognition and Control

  • Hazard versus risk definition including (hazard as potential harm, risk as probability and severity, exposure as key factor)

  • Importance of hazard recognition including (injury prevention, regulatory compliance, cost reduction, productivity improvement, liability protection)

  • OSHA General Duty Clause per 29 CFR 1910 including (employer responsibility for hazard-free workplace, recognized hazards, industry standards, feasible controls)

  • Incident causation models including (domino theory Heinrich, loss causation Bird, Swiss cheese Reason, multiple causation, prevention focus)

  • Proactive versus reactive approach including (hazard identification before incidents, prevention culture, continuous improvement, anticipation)

  • Personal responsibility including (worker rights and responsibilities, hazard reporting, stop work authority, participation in safety)

  • Course objectives and outcomes including (hazard identification skills, risk assessment, control selection, practical application, workplace improvement)

2. Types of Workplace Hazards

2.1 Safety Hazards (Physical Hazards)
  • Mechanical hazards including (moving parts, pinch points, rotating equipment, crushing, shearing, entanglement per OSHA 1910.212)

  • Electrical hazards per OSHA 1910 Subpart S including (shock, arc flash, fire, burns, contact with energized parts, improper grounding)

  • Fall hazards per OSHA 1910.23 and 1926 Subpart M including (falls from elevation, same level falls, ladder hazards, scaffolding, unprotected edges)

  • Struck-by and caught-between hazards including (falling objects, flying particles, moving vehicles, equipment, compressed materials)

  • Fire and explosion hazards per NFPA including (flammable materials, ignition sources, confined spaces, combustible dust, hot work)

2.2 Health Hazards (Chemical, Biological, Physical Agents)
  • Chemical hazards per OSHA 1910.1200 Hazcom including (toxic substances, corrosives, irritants, carcinogens, sensitizers, routes of exposure)

  • Biological hazards including (bacteria, viruses, fungi, bloodborne pathogens per OSHA 1910.1030, mold, animal-borne diseases)

  • Physical agents including (noise per OSHA 1910.95, vibration, radiation ionizing and non-ionizing, extreme temperatures, pressure)

  • Air contaminants per OSHA PELs including (dusts, fumes, mists, gases, vapors, permissible exposure limits, monitoring requirements)

  • Chronic versus acute exposure including (long-term low-level, short-term high-level, cumulative effects, latency periods)

2.3 Ergonomic and Psychosocial Hazards
  • Ergonomic hazards including (repetitive motion, forceful exertion, awkward postures, contact stress, vibration, musculoskeletal disorders)

  • Manual material handling per NIOSH Lifting Equation including (lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, back injuries, proper techniques)

  • Workstation design including (computer ergonomics, standing workstations, tool design, work height, reach zones)

  • Psychosocial hazards including (workplace stress, violence, bullying, harassment, fatigue, workload, work-life balance)

3. Hazard Identification Methods and Techniques

3.1 Workplace Inspections
  • Planned inspection purpose including (proactive hazard identification, compliance verification, trend analysis, continuous improvement)

  • Inspection types including (comprehensive facility, area-specific, equipment-focused, pre-use, post-incident, seasonal)

  • Inspection preparation including (checklists, previous reports, regulatory standards, PPE, tools, scheduling, notification)

  • Systematic inspection approach including (methodical coverage, all areas and shifts, different conditions, employee input, documentation)

  • Observation techniques including (looking beyond obvious, questioning normal, near-miss attention, housekeeping, maintenance)

3.2 Job Hazard Analysis (JHA) and Job Safety Analysis (JSA)
  • JHA/JSA purpose per OSHA including (task-level hazard identification, control development, training basis, procedure improvement)

  • Task selection criteria including (injury history, severity potential, new tasks, infrequent tasks, changed processes)

  • JHA process steps including (task breakdown, hazard identification per step, risk assessment, control measures, procedure documentation)

  • Task breakdown including (observable actions, logical sequence, manageable steps typically 5-10, avoid too broad or detailed)

  • Hazard identification per step including (what could go wrong, energy sources, environmental factors, human error potential)

3.3 Hazard Reporting Systems
  • Employee hazard reporting including (reporting mechanisms, non-punitive culture, feedback loops, timely response, recognition)

  • Near-miss reporting including (definition, precursor to incidents, learning opportunity, investigation, corrective action)

  • Reporting barriers including (fear of blame, perceived futility, time constraints, lack of awareness, overcoming barriers)

  • Reporting incentives including (positive reinforcement, recognition programs, safety leadership, transparency, visible action)

4. Risk Assessment and Evaluation

4.1 Likelihood and Severity Determination
  • Likelihood assessment including (frequency categories rare to almost certain, probability, historical data, expert judgment, scenario analysis)

  • Severity assessment including (consequence categories catastrophic to negligible, injury severity, property damage, business interruption)

  • Exposure factors including (number of people, duration, frequency, proximity to hazard, vulnerable populations)

  • Risk estimation including (qualitative descriptive, semi-quantitative scoring, quantitative numerical probability)

4.2 Risk Matrix Application
  • Risk matrix structure including (likelihood axis, severity axis, risk levels high/medium/low, color coding red/yellow/green)

  • Risk level interpretation including (high risk immediate action, medium risk planned action, low risk acceptable with monitoring)

  • Risk ranking including (prioritization, resource allocation, risk tolerance, management decision, documented rationale)

  • Limitations of risk matrices including (subjectivity, scale compression, false precision, understanding context)

4.3 Risk Acceptance Criteria
  • Risk tolerance levels including (unacceptable, ALARP as low as reasonably practicable, acceptable, cost-benefit)

  • Regulatory requirements including (OSHA standards as minimum, industry best practices, corporate policies, stakeholder expectations)

  • Decision-making authority including (operational decisions, management approval, risk acceptance documentation)

  • Residual risk including (risk remaining after controls, ongoing monitoring, continuous improvement, communication)

5. Hierarchy of Controls Framework

5.1 Hierarchy of Controls Overview
  • Hierarchy of Controls per NIOSH including (elimination, substitution, engineering controls, administrative controls, PPE, effectiveness order)

  • Effectiveness ranking including (most effective elimination, least effective PPE, reliability considerations, human factors)

  • Selection principles including (highest feasible level, multiple controls layers, defense in depth, Swiss cheese model)

  • Control failure considerations including (PPE depends on use, administrative requires compliance, engineering more reliable, elimination most reliable)

5.2 Elimination and Substitution
  • Elimination including (removing hazard entirely, process redesign, automation, different approach, most effective permanent solution)

  • Elimination examples including (remote operation, mechanization, eliminate confined space entry, redesign to avoid heights, hazardous material removal)

  • Substitution including (replacing with less hazardous, different material/process/equipment, reduced risk, feasibility assessment)

  • Substitution examples including (non-toxic for toxic chemicals, lower voltage, smaller quantities, water-based for solvent-based, quieter equipment)

5.3 Engineering Controls
  • Engineering controls definition including (physical changes, built-in protection, does not rely on behavior, passive safeguarding)

  • Machine guarding per OSHA 1910.212 including (point of operation guards, barrier guards, interlocks, two-hand controls, light curtains)

  • Ventilation systems including (local exhaust, dilution ventilation, fume hoods, capture velocity, air changes, negative pressure)

  • Enclosure and isolation including (separate hazardous processes, barriers, distance, enclosed equipment, soundproof rooms)

  • Engineering control examples including (fall protection railings, exhaust systems, machine guards, ergonomic workstation design, noise enclosures)

5.4 Administrative Controls
  • Administrative controls definition including (work practices, procedures, training, policies, behavior-dependent, requires enforcement)

  • Safe work procedures including (written procedures, task-specific, clear steps, accessible, training, regular review)

  • Work permits including (hot work, confined space, excavation, lockout/tagout, energy isolation, authorization)

  • Training and competency including (initial training, refresher, competency verification, on-the-job training, supervision)

  • Administrative examples including (job rotation, work-rest schedules, reduced exposure time, signage, access restrictions, buddy system)

5.5 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • PPE as last resort per OSHA 1910.132 including (least effective, depends on proper use, maintenance, training, supplement not substitute)

  • PPE hazard assessment per OSHA 1910.132(d) including (workplace evaluation, hazard identification, appropriate PPE selection, certification)

  • PPE types including (head, eye/face, hearing, respiratory, hand, foot, body, fall protection, selection criteria)

  • PPE program elements including (hazard assessment, selection, training, use, maintenance, inspection, replacement)

  • Respiratory protection per OSHA 1910.134 including (fit testing, medical evaluation, written program, APR versus SCBA, atmosphere testing)

6. Specific Hazard Recognition and Control

6.1 Fall Protection and Working at Heights
  • Fall hazards identification per OSHA 1910.23/1926 Subpart M including (unprotected edges 4 feet general industry/6 feet construction, openings, holes, skylights)

  • Fall protection systems including (guardrails, safety nets, personal fall arrest systems, warning lines, covers)

  • Ladder safety including (inspection, setup angle 75 degrees, three-point contact, extension above landing, securing)

  • Scaffolding safety including (competent person, platforms, guardrails, access, load capacity, inspection)

  • Fall protection plan including (hazard identification, system selection, rescue plan, training, equipment inspection)

6.2 Electrical Safety
  • Electrical hazard recognition per NFPA 70E including (shock, arc flash, contact voltage, wet conditions, improper grounding)

  • Lockout/Tagout per OSHA 1910.147 including (energy isolation, authorized employees, procedures, locks and tags, verification)

  • Electrical safe work practices including (de-energization, testing before touch, qualified persons, PPE, arc flash boundaries)

  • Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) per OSHA 1926.404 including (construction sites, wet locations, 6 mA trip, testing)

  • Electrical controls including (insulation, guarding, grounding, barriers, labeling, spacing, working clearances per NEC 110.26)

6.3 Machine Safeguarding
  • Machine hazard types including (point of operation, in-running nip points, rotating parts, flying chips, reciprocating parts)

  • Guarding methods per OSHA 1910.212 including (fixed guards, interlocked guards, adjustable guards, self-adjusting)

  • Safeguarding devices including (presence-sensing, pullback, restraint, two-hand control, gates)

  • Lockout/Tagout for maintenance including (energy control procedure, authorized training, periodic inspection, group lockout)

  • Machine safety controls including (emergency stops, guards in place, proper adjustment, no bypassing, maintenance)

6.4 Chemical Hazards and Hazard Communication
  • Chemical hazard identification per OSHA 1910.1200 including (SDS review Section 2, GHS pictograms, hazard statements, health and physical hazards)

  • Routes of exposure including (inhalation most common, skin absorption, ingestion, injection, prevention for each route)

  • Chemical controls including (substitution, closed systems, ventilation, personal protective equipment, hygiene practices)

  • Hazard communication program including (chemical inventory, SDS access, container labeling, training, written program)

  • Spill response including (containment, cleanup, PPE, disposal, reporting, prevention)

6.5 Ergonomic Hazards
  • Ergonomic risk factors including (repetition, force, awkward postures, static postures, contact stress, vibration, cold)

  • Manual material handling controls including (NIOSH lifting equation, mechanical aids, team lifting, load reduction, workstation height)

  • Workstation ergonomics including (adjustable furniture, monitor placement, keyboard position, neutral postures, footrests)

  • Tool selection including (ergonomic handles, powered tools, right tool for job, reduced vibration, maintenance)

  • Ergonomic program including (risk assessment, engineering controls, training, early reporting, medical management)

7. Control Implementation and Effectiveness Verification

7.1 Control Measure Selection and Design
  • Selection criteria including (hazard elimination preference, feasibility, cost-effectiveness, reliability, acceptance, compatibility)

  • Engineering design including (fail-safe design, redundancy, maintenance accessibility, interlocks, warning systems)

  • Interim controls including (temporary measures during permanent implementation, timeline, monitoring, risk communication)

  • Employee involvement including (frontline input, solution development, acceptance, ownership, practical perspective)

7.2 Control Implementation
  • Implementation planning including (timeline, responsibilities, resources, communication, training, monitoring)

  • Procurement and installation including (specifications, qualified contractors, commissioning, testing, documentation)

  • Training and communication including (affected employees, proper use, limitations, maintenance, reporting deficiencies)

  • Change management including (procedure updates, signage, new equipment orientation, supervision, enforcement)

7.3 Verification and Monitoring
  • Control effectiveness verification including (hazard reduction measurement, exposure assessment, incident reduction, employee feedback)

  • Monitoring methods including (inspections, observations, environmental monitoring, exposure assessment, testing)

  • Performance indicators including (leading indicators control function, lagging indicators incidents and injuries, trending)

  • Continuous improvement including (control failures, better technology, lessons learned, optimization, feedback loop)

8. Safety Culture and Proactive Hazard Management

8.1 Safety Leadership and Culture
  • Management commitment including (visible leadership, resource allocation, accountability, priority demonstration, communication)

  • Employee engagement including (hazard reporting, participation in JHAs, safety committees, suggestion programs, ownership)

  • Safety culture maturity including (reactive, dependent, independent, interdependent, generative levels)

  • Just culture including (error tolerance, accountability for recklessness, learning from mistakes, non-punitive reporting)

8.2 Proactive Hazard Management Programs
  • Behavior-based safety including (observation programs, peer feedback, positive reinforcement, barrier removal, data analysis)

  • Safety committees including (worker-management collaboration, hazard identification, recommendation development, communication)

  • Pre-task planning including (job briefings, hazard identification, control verification, communication, authorization)

  • Continuous hazard identification including (ongoing awareness, change management, new equipment, process modifications)

8.3 Training and Competency
  • Training needs assessment including (regulatory requirements, job-specific hazards, competency gaps, new employees, changes)

  • Training methods including (classroom, hands-on, on-the-job, e-learning, toolbox talks, competency verification)

  • Competency verification including (knowledge testing, performance observation, skill demonstration, certification)

  • Refresher training including (periodic reinforcement, procedure updates, incident lessons, regulatory changes, annual typically)

Practical Assessment

  • Workplace inspection simulation including (conducting systematic inspection of training area or photos, identifying hazards using checklist, documenting findings)

  • Job Hazard Analysis development including (selecting task, breaking into steps, identifying hazards per step, recommending controls using Hierarchy)

  • Control selection exercise including (evaluating hazard scenario, applying Hierarchy of Controls, selecting most effective feasible controls, justifying decisions)

  • Risk matrix application including (assessing provided scenarios for likelihood and severity, determining risk level, prioritizing recommended actions)

Gained Core Technical Skills

  • Hazard type identification and categorization

  • Systematic workplace inspection techniques

  • Job Hazard Analysis (JHA) development

  • Risk assessment using likelihood and severity

  • Risk matrix application and interpretation

  • Hierarchy of Controls framework application

  • Control measure selection and implementation

  • Engineering, administrative, and PPE control design

  • Hazard reporting and investigation participation

  • Safety culture and proactive hazard management

  • Regulatory compliance per OSHA standards

  • Control effectiveness verification methods

Training Design Methodology

ADDIE Training Design Methodology

Targeted Audience

  • Safety Officers conducting hazard assessments

  • Supervisors identifying workplace hazards

  • Operations Personnel recognizing daily risks

  • Maintenance Technicians working with equipment hazards

  • Facility Managers overseeing workplace safety

  • Safety Committee Members participating in hazard identification

  • New Employees requiring hazard awareness

  • Employees transitioning to safety roles

  • Team Leaders responsible for crew safety

  • Anyone seeking improved hazard recognition skills

Why Choose This Course

  • Comprehensive coverage of hazard types and recognition methods

  • Practical application of NIOSH Hierarchy of Controls

  • Integration of OSHA regulatory requirements and best practices

  • Hands-on inspection and JHA development exercises

  • Focus on proactive versus reactive hazard management

  • Real-world workplace scenarios and case studies

  • Risk assessment and prioritization techniques

  • Emphasis on safety culture and employee engagement

  • Control implementation and verification strategies

  • Regional considerations for Middle East workplace hazards

  • Certificate supporting safety training compliance

Note

Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.

Course Outline

1. Introduction to Hazard Recognition and Control

  • Hazard versus risk definition including (hazard as potential harm, risk as probability and severity, exposure as key factor)

  • Importance of hazard recognition including (injury prevention, regulatory compliance, cost reduction, productivity improvement, liability protection)

  • OSHA General Duty Clause per 29 CFR 1910 including (employer responsibility for hazard-free workplace, recognized hazards, industry standards, feasible controls)

  • Incident causation models including (domino theory Heinrich, loss causation Bird, Swiss cheese Reason, multiple causation, prevention focus)

  • Proactive versus reactive approach including (hazard identification before incidents, prevention culture, continuous improvement, anticipation)

  • Personal responsibility including (worker rights and responsibilities, hazard reporting, stop work authority, participation in safety)

  • Course objectives and outcomes including (hazard identification skills, risk assessment, control selection, practical application, workplace improvement)

2. Types of Workplace Hazards

2.1 Safety Hazards (Physical Hazards)
  • Mechanical hazards including (moving parts, pinch points, rotating equipment, crushing, shearing, entanglement per OSHA 1910.212)

  • Electrical hazards per OSHA 1910 Subpart S including (shock, arc flash, fire, burns, contact with energized parts, improper grounding)

  • Fall hazards per OSHA 1910.23 and 1926 Subpart M including (falls from elevation, same level falls, ladder hazards, scaffolding, unprotected edges)

  • Struck-by and caught-between hazards including (falling objects, flying particles, moving vehicles, equipment, compressed materials)

  • Fire and explosion hazards per NFPA including (flammable materials, ignition sources, confined spaces, combustible dust, hot work)

2.2 Health Hazards (Chemical, Biological, Physical Agents)
  • Chemical hazards per OSHA 1910.1200 Hazcom including (toxic substances, corrosives, irritants, carcinogens, sensitizers, routes of exposure)

  • Biological hazards including (bacteria, viruses, fungi, bloodborne pathogens per OSHA 1910.1030, mold, animal-borne diseases)

  • Physical agents including (noise per OSHA 1910.95, vibration, radiation ionizing and non-ionizing, extreme temperatures, pressure)

  • Air contaminants per OSHA PELs including (dusts, fumes, mists, gases, vapors, permissible exposure limits, monitoring requirements)

  • Chronic versus acute exposure including (long-term low-level, short-term high-level, cumulative effects, latency periods)

2.3 Ergonomic and Psychosocial Hazards
  • Ergonomic hazards including (repetitive motion, forceful exertion, awkward postures, contact stress, vibration, musculoskeletal disorders)

  • Manual material handling per NIOSH Lifting Equation including (lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, back injuries, proper techniques)

  • Workstation design including (computer ergonomics, standing workstations, tool design, work height, reach zones)

  • Psychosocial hazards including (workplace stress, violence, bullying, harassment, fatigue, workload, work-life balance)

3. Hazard Identification Methods and Techniques

3.1 Workplace Inspections
  • Planned inspection purpose including (proactive hazard identification, compliance verification, trend analysis, continuous improvement)

  • Inspection types including (comprehensive facility, area-specific, equipment-focused, pre-use, post-incident, seasonal)

  • Inspection preparation including (checklists, previous reports, regulatory standards, PPE, tools, scheduling, notification)

  • Systematic inspection approach including (methodical coverage, all areas and shifts, different conditions, employee input, documentation)

  • Observation techniques including (looking beyond obvious, questioning normal, near-miss attention, housekeeping, maintenance)

3.2 Job Hazard Analysis (JHA) and Job Safety Analysis (JSA)
  • JHA/JSA purpose per OSHA including (task-level hazard identification, control development, training basis, procedure improvement)

  • Task selection criteria including (injury history, severity potential, new tasks, infrequent tasks, changed processes)

  • JHA process steps including (task breakdown, hazard identification per step, risk assessment, control measures, procedure documentation)

  • Task breakdown including (observable actions, logical sequence, manageable steps typically 5-10, avoid too broad or detailed)

  • Hazard identification per step including (what could go wrong, energy sources, environmental factors, human error potential)

3.3 Hazard Reporting Systems
  • Employee hazard reporting including (reporting mechanisms, non-punitive culture, feedback loops, timely response, recognition)

  • Near-miss reporting including (definition, precursor to incidents, learning opportunity, investigation, corrective action)

  • Reporting barriers including (fear of blame, perceived futility, time constraints, lack of awareness, overcoming barriers)

  • Reporting incentives including (positive reinforcement, recognition programs, safety leadership, transparency, visible action)

4. Risk Assessment and Evaluation

4.1 Likelihood and Severity Determination
  • Likelihood assessment including (frequency categories rare to almost certain, probability, historical data, expert judgment, scenario analysis)

  • Severity assessment including (consequence categories catastrophic to negligible, injury severity, property damage, business interruption)

  • Exposure factors including (number of people, duration, frequency, proximity to hazard, vulnerable populations)

  • Risk estimation including (qualitative descriptive, semi-quantitative scoring, quantitative numerical probability)

4.2 Risk Matrix Application
  • Risk matrix structure including (likelihood axis, severity axis, risk levels high/medium/low, color coding red/yellow/green)

  • Risk level interpretation including (high risk immediate action, medium risk planned action, low risk acceptable with monitoring)

  • Risk ranking including (prioritization, resource allocation, risk tolerance, management decision, documented rationale)

  • Limitations of risk matrices including (subjectivity, scale compression, false precision, understanding context)

4.3 Risk Acceptance Criteria
  • Risk tolerance levels including (unacceptable, ALARP as low as reasonably practicable, acceptable, cost-benefit)

  • Regulatory requirements including (OSHA standards as minimum, industry best practices, corporate policies, stakeholder expectations)

  • Decision-making authority including (operational decisions, management approval, risk acceptance documentation)

  • Residual risk including (risk remaining after controls, ongoing monitoring, continuous improvement, communication)

5. Hierarchy of Controls Framework

5.1 Hierarchy of Controls Overview
  • Hierarchy of Controls per NIOSH including (elimination, substitution, engineering controls, administrative controls, PPE, effectiveness order)

  • Effectiveness ranking including (most effective elimination, least effective PPE, reliability considerations, human factors)

  • Selection principles including (highest feasible level, multiple controls layers, defense in depth, Swiss cheese model)

  • Control failure considerations including (PPE depends on use, administrative requires compliance, engineering more reliable, elimination most reliable)

5.2 Elimination and Substitution
  • Elimination including (removing hazard entirely, process redesign, automation, different approach, most effective permanent solution)

  • Elimination examples including (remote operation, mechanization, eliminate confined space entry, redesign to avoid heights, hazardous material removal)

  • Substitution including (replacing with less hazardous, different material/process/equipment, reduced risk, feasibility assessment)

  • Substitution examples including (non-toxic for toxic chemicals, lower voltage, smaller quantities, water-based for solvent-based, quieter equipment)

5.3 Engineering Controls
  • Engineering controls definition including (physical changes, built-in protection, does not rely on behavior, passive safeguarding)

  • Machine guarding per OSHA 1910.212 including (point of operation guards, barrier guards, interlocks, two-hand controls, light curtains)

  • Ventilation systems including (local exhaust, dilution ventilation, fume hoods, capture velocity, air changes, negative pressure)

  • Enclosure and isolation including (separate hazardous processes, barriers, distance, enclosed equipment, soundproof rooms)

  • Engineering control examples including (fall protection railings, exhaust systems, machine guards, ergonomic workstation design, noise enclosures)

5.4 Administrative Controls
  • Administrative controls definition including (work practices, procedures, training, policies, behavior-dependent, requires enforcement)

  • Safe work procedures including (written procedures, task-specific, clear steps, accessible, training, regular review)

  • Work permits including (hot work, confined space, excavation, lockout/tagout, energy isolation, authorization)

  • Training and competency including (initial training, refresher, competency verification, on-the-job training, supervision)

  • Administrative examples including (job rotation, work-rest schedules, reduced exposure time, signage, access restrictions, buddy system)

5.5 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • PPE as last resort per OSHA 1910.132 including (least effective, depends on proper use, maintenance, training, supplement not substitute)

  • PPE hazard assessment per OSHA 1910.132(d) including (workplace evaluation, hazard identification, appropriate PPE selection, certification)

  • PPE types including (head, eye/face, hearing, respiratory, hand, foot, body, fall protection, selection criteria)

  • PPE program elements including (hazard assessment, selection, training, use, maintenance, inspection, replacement)

  • Respiratory protection per OSHA 1910.134 including (fit testing, medical evaluation, written program, APR versus SCBA, atmosphere testing)

6. Specific Hazard Recognition and Control

6.1 Fall Protection and Working at Heights
  • Fall hazards identification per OSHA 1910.23/1926 Subpart M including (unprotected edges 4 feet general industry/6 feet construction, openings, holes, skylights)

  • Fall protection systems including (guardrails, safety nets, personal fall arrest systems, warning lines, covers)

  • Ladder safety including (inspection, setup angle 75 degrees, three-point contact, extension above landing, securing)

  • Scaffolding safety including (competent person, platforms, guardrails, access, load capacity, inspection)

  • Fall protection plan including (hazard identification, system selection, rescue plan, training, equipment inspection)

6.2 Electrical Safety
  • Electrical hazard recognition per NFPA 70E including (shock, arc flash, contact voltage, wet conditions, improper grounding)

  • Lockout/Tagout per OSHA 1910.147 including (energy isolation, authorized employees, procedures, locks and tags, verification)

  • Electrical safe work practices including (de-energization, testing before touch, qualified persons, PPE, arc flash boundaries)

  • Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) per OSHA 1926.404 including (construction sites, wet locations, 6 mA trip, testing)

  • Electrical controls including (insulation, guarding, grounding, barriers, labeling, spacing, working clearances per NEC 110.26)

6.3 Machine Safeguarding
  • Machine hazard types including (point of operation, in-running nip points, rotating parts, flying chips, reciprocating parts)

  • Guarding methods per OSHA 1910.212 including (fixed guards, interlocked guards, adjustable guards, self-adjusting)

  • Safeguarding devices including (presence-sensing, pullback, restraint, two-hand control, gates)

  • Lockout/Tagout for maintenance including (energy control procedure, authorized training, periodic inspection, group lockout)

  • Machine safety controls including (emergency stops, guards in place, proper adjustment, no bypassing, maintenance)

6.4 Chemical Hazards and Hazard Communication
  • Chemical hazard identification per OSHA 1910.1200 including (SDS review Section 2, GHS pictograms, hazard statements, health and physical hazards)

  • Routes of exposure including (inhalation most common, skin absorption, ingestion, injection, prevention for each route)

  • Chemical controls including (substitution, closed systems, ventilation, personal protective equipment, hygiene practices)

  • Hazard communication program including (chemical inventory, SDS access, container labeling, training, written program)

  • Spill response including (containment, cleanup, PPE, disposal, reporting, prevention)

6.5 Ergonomic Hazards
  • Ergonomic risk factors including (repetition, force, awkward postures, static postures, contact stress, vibration, cold)

  • Manual material handling controls including (NIOSH lifting equation, mechanical aids, team lifting, load reduction, workstation height)

  • Workstation ergonomics including (adjustable furniture, monitor placement, keyboard position, neutral postures, footrests)

  • Tool selection including (ergonomic handles, powered tools, right tool for job, reduced vibration, maintenance)

  • Ergonomic program including (risk assessment, engineering controls, training, early reporting, medical management)

7. Control Implementation and Effectiveness Verification

7.1 Control Measure Selection and Design
  • Selection criteria including (hazard elimination preference, feasibility, cost-effectiveness, reliability, acceptance, compatibility)

  • Engineering design including (fail-safe design, redundancy, maintenance accessibility, interlocks, warning systems)

  • Interim controls including (temporary measures during permanent implementation, timeline, monitoring, risk communication)

  • Employee involvement including (frontline input, solution development, acceptance, ownership, practical perspective)

7.2 Control Implementation
  • Implementation planning including (timeline, responsibilities, resources, communication, training, monitoring)

  • Procurement and installation including (specifications, qualified contractors, commissioning, testing, documentation)

  • Training and communication including (affected employees, proper use, limitations, maintenance, reporting deficiencies)

  • Change management including (procedure updates, signage, new equipment orientation, supervision, enforcement)

7.3 Verification and Monitoring
  • Control effectiveness verification including (hazard reduction measurement, exposure assessment, incident reduction, employee feedback)

  • Monitoring methods including (inspections, observations, environmental monitoring, exposure assessment, testing)

  • Performance indicators including (leading indicators control function, lagging indicators incidents and injuries, trending)

  • Continuous improvement including (control failures, better technology, lessons learned, optimization, feedback loop)

8. Safety Culture and Proactive Hazard Management

8.1 Safety Leadership and Culture
  • Management commitment including (visible leadership, resource allocation, accountability, priority demonstration, communication)

  • Employee engagement including (hazard reporting, participation in JHAs, safety committees, suggestion programs, ownership)

  • Safety culture maturity including (reactive, dependent, independent, interdependent, generative levels)

  • Just culture including (error tolerance, accountability for recklessness, learning from mistakes, non-punitive reporting)

8.2 Proactive Hazard Management Programs
  • Behavior-based safety including (observation programs, peer feedback, positive reinforcement, barrier removal, data analysis)

  • Safety committees including (worker-management collaboration, hazard identification, recommendation development, communication)

  • Pre-task planning including (job briefings, hazard identification, control verification, communication, authorization)

  • Continuous hazard identification including (ongoing awareness, change management, new equipment, process modifications)

8.3 Training and Competency
  • Training needs assessment including (regulatory requirements, job-specific hazards, competency gaps, new employees, changes)

  • Training methods including (classroom, hands-on, on-the-job, e-learning, toolbox talks, competency verification)

  • Competency verification including (knowledge testing, performance observation, skill demonstration, certification)

  • Refresher training including (periodic reinforcement, procedure updates, incident lessons, regulatory changes, annual typically)

Why Choose This Course?

  • Comprehensive coverage of hazard types and recognition methods

  • Practical application of NIOSH Hierarchy of Controls

  • Integration of OSHA regulatory requirements and best practices

  • Hands-on inspection and JHA development exercises

  • Focus on proactive versus reactive hazard management

  • Real-world workplace scenarios and case studies

  • Risk assessment and prioritization techniques

  • Emphasis on safety culture and employee engagement

  • Control implementation and verification strategies

  • Regional considerations for Middle East workplace hazards

  • Certificate supporting safety training compliance

Note: This course outline, including specific topics, modules, and duration, can be customized based on the specific needs and requirements of the client.

Practical Assessment

  • Workplace inspection simulation including (conducting systematic inspection of training area or photos, identifying hazards using checklist, documenting findings)

  • Job Hazard Analysis development including (selecting task, breaking into steps, identifying hazards per step, recommending controls using Hierarchy)

  • Control selection exercise including (evaluating hazard scenario, applying Hierarchy of Controls, selecting most effective feasible controls, justifying decisions)

  • Risk matrix application including (assessing provided scenarios for likelihood and severity, determining risk level, prioritizing recommended actions)

Course Overview

This comprehensive Hazard Recognition and Control training course provides participants with essential knowledge and practical skills required for identifying workplace hazards and implementing effective control measures. The course covers fundamental hazard recognition principles along with critical techniques for risk assessment, control selection, and hazard mitigation aligned with OSHA General Industry and Construction standards, ANSI/ASSP Z10 Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems, NIOSH guidelines, and the Hierarchy of Controls framework.


Participants will learn to apply systematic hazard identification methods and proven control strategies to eliminate or minimize workplace risks. This course combines theoretical concepts with extensive practical applications and workplace scenarios to ensure participants gain valuable skills applicable to their professional environment while emphasizing proactive hazard management and injury prevention.

Key Learning Objectives

  • Understand hazard types and workplace risk factors

  • Apply systematic hazard identification and recognition techniques

  • Conduct workplace inspections and job hazard analysis

  • Assess risk using likelihood and severity criteria

  • Apply Hierarchy of Controls for hazard mitigation

  • Select and implement appropriate control measures

  • Verify control effectiveness and maintain safeguards

  • Foster proactive hazard reporting and safety culture

Knowledge Assessment

  • Technical quizzes on hazard types including (multiple-choice questions categorizing hazards, true/false on OSHA requirements, matching hazards to controls)

  • Hierarchy of Controls application including (ranking control measures by effectiveness, selecting appropriate controls for scenarios, explaining selection rationale)

  • Risk assessment exercises including (determining likelihood and severity for scenarios, plotting on risk matrix, prioritizing actions)

  • Hazard recognition scenarios including (identifying hazards from workplace photos, categorizing hazard types, recommending controls)

Targeted Audience

  • Safety Officers conducting hazard assessments

  • Supervisors identifying workplace hazards

  • Operations Personnel recognizing daily risks

  • Maintenance Technicians working with equipment hazards

  • Facility Managers overseeing workplace safety

  • Safety Committee Members participating in hazard identification

  • New Employees requiring hazard awareness

  • Employees transitioning to safety roles

  • Team Leaders responsible for crew safety

  • Anyone seeking improved hazard recognition skills

Main Service Location

Suggested Products

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

National Grid Safety Rules

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Scaffolding Supervision

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

HAZMAT Awareness

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Noise Monitoring

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Total Quality Management

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Fire Fighting Awareness

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Offroad Testing

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Emergency Response Awareness

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Mechanical Safety

This item is connected to a text field in your database. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content.

Hazard Recognition and Reporting

bottom of page