Hazards
If you were hired by a company to work in an area where hazardous chemicals are stored but your regular job would not require you to handle those chemicals, would your employer be required by OSHA to provide you training?
No
A warning label is required to provide set information. The following list contains only some of this required information. What required information is missing? • Name, Address, and Telephone Number • Signal Words • Hazard Statements • Precautionary Statements • Pictograms
Product Identifier
A(n) ________ Exposure is a short term or brief exposure that may create an immediate health hazard.
Acute
Which of the following is a requirement for the Safety Data Sheet (SDS)?
All options are required
The "Right-to-Know" law requires your employer to have a written hazardous communication (HAZCOM) program including
All options are required under the "Right-to-Know" law
A(n) __________ exposure is a repeated or prolonged exposure (over months or years) that may bring about slowly developing symptoms. These exposures do not cause immediate, obvious harm and a person may not see, feel, or smell the danger. Effects, however, may be permanent.
Chronic
The Hazard Communication Standard, commonly called the "Right-to-Know" law, gives you the right to know what information?
Every hazardous chemical that you may be exposed to at work
This is a document that each chemical manufacturer, distributor, or importer must provide for each hazardous chemical. It contains detailed information such as the properties of each chemical; the physical, health, and environmental health hazards; protective measures; and safety precautions for handling, storing, and transporting the chemical. This document is typically stored in the work space but is likely not attached to the container containing the chemical.
HazCom
In the __________ Standard, chemical manufacturers, importers, and distributors are required to provide hazard information by way of Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) and labels on containers
Hazard Communication
Which route of entry could chemicals use to enter through the body's airways?
Inhalation