Quiz-summary
0 of 10 questions completed
Questions:
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Information
Premium Practice Questions
You have already completed the quiz before. Hence you can not start it again.
Quiz is loading...
You must sign in or sign up to start the quiz.
You have to finish following quiz, to start this quiz:
Results
0 of 10 questions answered correctly
Your time:
Time has elapsed
Categories
- Not categorized 0%
Unlock Your Full Report
You missed {missed_count} questions. Enter your email to see exactly which ones you got wrong and read the detailed explanations.
Submit to instantly unlock detailed explanations for every question.
Success! Your results are now unlocked. You can see the correct answers and detailed explanations below.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- Answered
- Review
-
Question 1 of 10
1. Question
Which description best captures the essence of Infection Prevention and Control for NVQ Level 6 Diploma in Occupational Health and Safety Practice? In the context of a high-risk waste management facility handling clinical materials, the Health and Safety Manager is tasked with refining the organizational strategy to mitigate the risk of exposure to blood-borne pathogens and other biological hazards.
Correct
Correct: At the NVQ Level 6, the focus is on strategic management and the application of the hierarchy of controls. Integrating COSHH (Control of Substances Hazardous to Health) assessments into a broader risk management framework ensures that biological hazards are addressed at the source through engineering and administrative controls. Continuous monitoring and health surveillance provide the necessary feedback loop to evaluate the effectiveness of the management system, aligning with professional OHS standards.
Incorrect: Focusing primarily on Personal Protective Equipment and vaccinations represents a lower-tier control strategy that does not address the root cause of exposure or the management system as a whole. Prioritizing reactive reporting and RIDDOR compliance is a narrow, legalistic approach that fails to implement proactive prevention measures. Relying solely on cleaning and disinfection is an operational task that, while important, does not constitute a comprehensive health and safety management system for biological risks.
Takeaway: Effective infection prevention at a senior management level requires a proactive, systems-based approach that prioritizes high-level controls and integrates regulatory requirements like COSHH into the organizational risk framework.
Incorrect
Correct: At the NVQ Level 6, the focus is on strategic management and the application of the hierarchy of controls. Integrating COSHH (Control of Substances Hazardous to Health) assessments into a broader risk management framework ensures that biological hazards are addressed at the source through engineering and administrative controls. Continuous monitoring and health surveillance provide the necessary feedback loop to evaluate the effectiveness of the management system, aligning with professional OHS standards.
Incorrect: Focusing primarily on Personal Protective Equipment and vaccinations represents a lower-tier control strategy that does not address the root cause of exposure or the management system as a whole. Prioritizing reactive reporting and RIDDOR compliance is a narrow, legalistic approach that fails to implement proactive prevention measures. Relying solely on cleaning and disinfection is an operational task that, while important, does not constitute a comprehensive health and safety management system for biological risks.
Takeaway: Effective infection prevention at a senior management level requires a proactive, systems-based approach that prioritizes high-level controls and integrates regulatory requirements like COSHH into the organizational risk framework.
-
Question 2 of 10
2. Question
Serving as operations manager at a broker-dealer, you are called to advise on Risk Assessment for Support Activities during risk appetite review. The briefing a whistleblower report highlights that outsourced facilities maintenance staff are frequently bypassing the permit-to-work system for high-level lighting repairs in the trading floor atrium. Despite a 12-month review cycle being in place, the current risk assessment fails to account for the dynamic nature of the trading environment and the specific pressures placed on support staff to complete tasks during market downtime. Which action should be prioritized to ensure the risk assessment for these support activities is suitable and sufficient under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999?
Correct
Correct: In dynamic environments where conditions change rapidly, a static or periodic risk assessment is often insufficient. Integrating a point-of-work risk assessment (POWRA) or dynamic risk assessment ensures that the ‘suitable and sufficient’ requirement of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 is met. This approach forces the identification of hazards present at the specific moment of work, such as time pressure or environmental changes, which a 12-month review would miss.
Incorrect: Increasing the frequency of formal reviews to quarterly intervals still relies on a static assessment model that cannot account for day-to-day operational fluctuations. Requiring a signature from a trading floor supervisor is an administrative control that may ensure operational convenience but does not necessarily improve the identification of technical safety hazards by the competent person. Auditing the provider’s corporate policy is a high-level governance activity that fails to address the immediate procedural breakdown and the specific hazards identified in the whistleblower report.
Takeaway: For support activities in high-pressure or changing environments, point-of-work risk assessments are essential to supplement generic assessments and ensure all situational hazards are identified.
Incorrect
Correct: In dynamic environments where conditions change rapidly, a static or periodic risk assessment is often insufficient. Integrating a point-of-work risk assessment (POWRA) or dynamic risk assessment ensures that the ‘suitable and sufficient’ requirement of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 is met. This approach forces the identification of hazards present at the specific moment of work, such as time pressure or environmental changes, which a 12-month review would miss.
Incorrect: Increasing the frequency of formal reviews to quarterly intervals still relies on a static assessment model that cannot account for day-to-day operational fluctuations. Requiring a signature from a trading floor supervisor is an administrative control that may ensure operational convenience but does not necessarily improve the identification of technical safety hazards by the competent person. Auditing the provider’s corporate policy is a high-level governance activity that fails to address the immediate procedural breakdown and the specific hazards identified in the whistleblower report.
Takeaway: For support activities in high-pressure or changing environments, point-of-work risk assessments are essential to supplement generic assessments and ensure all situational hazards are identified.
-
Question 3 of 10
3. Question
During a committee meeting at a broker-dealer, a question arises about OHS for the Exhibition and Display Sector as part of risk appetite review. The discussion reveals that the firm has commissioned a bespoke double-deck exhibition stand for an upcoming 3-day financial expo, with a strict 48-hour window for assembly. The Health and Safety Manager notes that the design involves complex overhead lighting rigs and a mezzanine level for VIP client meetings. Concerns are raised regarding the coordination of multiple specialist contractors and the potential for structural failure or falls from height during the rapid build phase. Which action best demonstrates the application of the Principles of Prevention under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 to mitigate risks during the exhibition build?
Correct
Correct: Integrating safety into the design phase by specifying pre-fabricated modular components aligns with the highest levels of the hierarchy of controls (Elimination and Substitution) and the Principles of Prevention. By designing out the need for hazardous activities like on-site welding or extensive work at height, the risk is addressed at the source rather than relying on administrative controls or personal protective equipment.
Incorrect: Requiring RAMS is a necessary administrative control but does not inherently reduce the physical hazards of the build. Mandating harnesses and fall-arrest systems represents a reliance on individual protection, which is lower in the hierarchy of controls than collective or design-based measures. Appointing a supervisor and enforcing PPE are administrative and individual controls that do not address the root cause of the hazards as effectively as design-stage interventions.
Takeaway: In the exhibition sector, the most effective risk management strategy is to eliminate hazards at the design stage through pre-fabrication and modular construction rather than relying on site-based controls or PPE.
Incorrect
Correct: Integrating safety into the design phase by specifying pre-fabricated modular components aligns with the highest levels of the hierarchy of controls (Elimination and Substitution) and the Principles of Prevention. By designing out the need for hazardous activities like on-site welding or extensive work at height, the risk is addressed at the source rather than relying on administrative controls or personal protective equipment.
Incorrect: Requiring RAMS is a necessary administrative control but does not inherently reduce the physical hazards of the build. Mandating harnesses and fall-arrest systems represents a reliance on individual protection, which is lower in the hierarchy of controls than collective or design-based measures. Appointing a supervisor and enforcing PPE are administrative and individual controls that do not address the root cause of the hazards as effectively as design-stage interventions.
Takeaway: In the exhibition sector, the most effective risk management strategy is to eliminate hazards at the design stage through pre-fabrication and modular construction rather than relying on site-based controls or PPE.
-
Question 4 of 10
4. Question
A regulatory inspection at a listed company focuses on Crowd Management and Safety in the context of change management. The examiner notes that the organization is currently repurposing a large-scale manufacturing floor into a high-density distribution center, which will increase the peak-time occupancy from 150 to 450 personnel within the next 30 days. While the Health and Safety Manager has updated the general risk assessment, the inspector observes that the existing emergency egress routes were originally designed for the lower occupancy levels and now intersect with new automated conveyor systems. To ensure compliance with the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and maintain a robust safety management system during this transition, which action should the organization prioritize?
Correct
Correct: Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, any significant change in the workplace or its occupancy requires a review of risk assessments and emergency arrangements. A crowd dynamics analysis is essential when occupancy triples, as it ensures that the physical capacity of the escape routes (egress width and travel distance) can safely accommodate the increased flow of people without causing dangerous crushing or bottlenecks, especially where new physical obstructions like conveyors have been introduced.
Incorrect: Increasing the number of fire wardens is an administrative control that does not address the fundamental physical inadequacy of the egress routes. Distributing maps and conducting briefings are necessary communication tools but do not mitigate the technical risk of insufficient exit capacity. Waiting for final sign-off before updating procedures is a failure of change management, as it leaves the workforce exposed to unmanaged risks during the high-risk transition phase.
Takeaway: When significant changes in occupancy or layout occur, organizations must proactively re-validate the physical capacity of crowd movement and egress routes through technical analysis rather than relying solely on administrative controls.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, any significant change in the workplace or its occupancy requires a review of risk assessments and emergency arrangements. A crowd dynamics analysis is essential when occupancy triples, as it ensures that the physical capacity of the escape routes (egress width and travel distance) can safely accommodate the increased flow of people without causing dangerous crushing or bottlenecks, especially where new physical obstructions like conveyors have been introduced.
Incorrect: Increasing the number of fire wardens is an administrative control that does not address the fundamental physical inadequacy of the egress routes. Distributing maps and conducting briefings are necessary communication tools but do not mitigate the technical risk of insufficient exit capacity. Waiting for final sign-off before updating procedures is a failure of change management, as it leaves the workforce exposed to unmanaged risks during the high-risk transition phase.
Takeaway: When significant changes in occupancy or layout occur, organizations must proactively re-validate the physical capacity of crowd movement and egress routes through technical analysis rather than relying solely on administrative controls.
-
Question 5 of 10
5. Question
The risk committee at a private bank is debating standards for OHS for the Childcare Sector as part of regulatory inspection. The central issue is that the bank’s onsite nursery, which accommodates 50 children, has seen a rise in minor injuries related to the outdoor climbing frame. While the facility manager suggests that increased supervision is the most cost-effective solution, the Health and Safety Lead argues that the current risk assessment does not sufficiently apply the Hierarchy of Controls as required by the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. Which action should the committee prioritize to demonstrate the highest level of risk control for this specific hazard?
Correct
Correct: Replacing the equipment with lower-profile versions and installing impact-absorbing flooring represents a combination of substitution and engineering controls. According to the Hierarchy of Controls, these measures are superior to administrative controls or PPE because they physically remove or reduce the hazard at the source, rather than relying on human behavior or supervision to prevent an injury.
Incorrect: Increasing staff ratios is an administrative control that relies on constant human vigilance and does not change the physical hazard of the equipment. Mandating helmets is a form of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), which is the least effective control and often impractical or hazardous itself in a childcare play environment. Implementing a digital logging system is an administrative monitoring control that helps identify wear and tear but does not address the inherent risk of falls from height during active play.
Takeaway: In a childcare OHS context, engineering and substitution controls that modify the environment are prioritized over administrative supervision and PPE to ensure robust risk management.
Incorrect
Correct: Replacing the equipment with lower-profile versions and installing impact-absorbing flooring represents a combination of substitution and engineering controls. According to the Hierarchy of Controls, these measures are superior to administrative controls or PPE because they physically remove or reduce the hazard at the source, rather than relying on human behavior or supervision to prevent an injury.
Incorrect: Increasing staff ratios is an administrative control that relies on constant human vigilance and does not change the physical hazard of the equipment. Mandating helmets is a form of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), which is the least effective control and often impractical or hazardous itself in a childcare play environment. Implementing a digital logging system is an administrative monitoring control that helps identify wear and tear but does not address the inherent risk of falls from height during active play.
Takeaway: In a childcare OHS context, engineering and substitution controls that modify the environment are prioritized over administrative supervision and PPE to ensure robust risk management.
-
Question 6 of 10
6. Question
The board of directors at a fintech lender has asked for a recommendation regarding Radiation Safety as part of conflicts of interest. The background paper states that the firm is finalizing a 10-year lease for a flagship office located directly above a private oncology clinic utilizing high-energy linear accelerators. While the fintech firm does not use radiation in its own operations, the board is concerned about potential exposure to employees and the legal implications under the Ionising Radiations Regulations 2017 (IRR17). As the Health and Safety Manager, what is the most appropriate strategic action to ensure compliance and employee safety in this multi-occupancy setting?
Correct
Correct: Under the Ionising Radiations Regulations 2017 (IRR17) and the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, employers sharing a workplace must cooperate and coordinate their activities. Even though the fintech firm is not a radiation employer, they have a duty of care to ensure their employees are not exposed to hazards created by neighbors. Reviewing the clinic’s risk assessments and shielding data, supported by independent advice from a Radiation Protection Adviser (RPA), ensures that the fintech firm fulfills its duty to verify that the ‘As Low As Reasonably Practicable’ (ALARP) principle is maintained for its staff.
Incorrect: Issuing dosimeters to non-classified workers in a non-radiation environment is an inappropriate and disproportionate response that does not address the underlying requirement for risk assessment and cooperation. Relying solely on the clinic’s internal rules without independent verification or formal coordination fails the fintech firm’s own legal obligations to assess risks to its employees. Installing automated monitors is an engineering control that may be technically unnecessary if structural shielding is verified, and it does not satisfy the administrative and legal requirements for professional consultation and inter-organizational cooperation.
Takeaway: In multi-occupancy buildings, employers must proactively cooperate and verify the safety assessments of neighbors who utilize hazardous sources like ionising radiation to fulfill their own statutory duty of care.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Ionising Radiations Regulations 2017 (IRR17) and the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, employers sharing a workplace must cooperate and coordinate their activities. Even though the fintech firm is not a radiation employer, they have a duty of care to ensure their employees are not exposed to hazards created by neighbors. Reviewing the clinic’s risk assessments and shielding data, supported by independent advice from a Radiation Protection Adviser (RPA), ensures that the fintech firm fulfills its duty to verify that the ‘As Low As Reasonably Practicable’ (ALARP) principle is maintained for its staff.
Incorrect: Issuing dosimeters to non-classified workers in a non-radiation environment is an inappropriate and disproportionate response that does not address the underlying requirement for risk assessment and cooperation. Relying solely on the clinic’s internal rules without independent verification or formal coordination fails the fintech firm’s own legal obligations to assess risks to its employees. Installing automated monitors is an engineering control that may be technically unnecessary if structural shielding is verified, and it does not satisfy the administrative and legal requirements for professional consultation and inter-organizational cooperation.
Takeaway: In multi-occupancy buildings, employers must proactively cooperate and verify the safety assessments of neighbors who utilize hazardous sources like ionising radiation to fulfill their own statutory duty of care.
-
Question 7 of 10
7. Question
The operations team at a credit union has encountered an exception involving OHS for the Laboratory and Research Sector during market conduct. They report that during a due diligence audit of a biotechnology research facility currently under their temporary management, a significant breach of the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations was identified. Specifically, the facility has been relying primarily on high-specification respiratory protective equipment (RPE) for technicians handling volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for over six months, despite a recent ventilation system upgrade that was intended to provide local exhaust ventilation (LEV). The LEV system is functional but is currently bypassed because it increases ambient noise levels beyond the comfort threshold of the researchers. As the lead Health and Safety practitioner, what is the most appropriate action to ensure compliance with the hierarchy of controls and UK health and safety legislation?
Correct
Correct: Under the COSHH Regulations and the general hierarchy of controls, engineering controls such as Local Exhaust Ventilation (LEV) must take precedence over Personal Protective Equipment (PPE/RPE). Bypassing an available engineering control for comfort reasons is a breach of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. The noise generated by the LEV is a secondary hazard that must be addressed through its own risk assessment and mitigation strategy, such as acoustic dampening, rather than by reverting to a lower level of the control hierarchy for the primary chemical hazard.
Incorrect: Continuing the use of RPE when a functional engineering control is available fails to meet the legal requirement to apply the hierarchy of controls. Increasing the frequency of face-fit testing improves the reliability of the RPE but does not satisfy the requirement to prioritize collective protection over individual protection. Reclassifying substances without a rigorous toxicological basis to circumvent safety requirements is a violation of risk assessment principles and professional ethics.
Takeaway: Engineering controls must always be prioritized over personal protective equipment, and secondary hazards arising from these controls must be managed independently without compromising primary safety measures.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the COSHH Regulations and the general hierarchy of controls, engineering controls such as Local Exhaust Ventilation (LEV) must take precedence over Personal Protective Equipment (PPE/RPE). Bypassing an available engineering control for comfort reasons is a breach of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. The noise generated by the LEV is a secondary hazard that must be addressed through its own risk assessment and mitigation strategy, such as acoustic dampening, rather than by reverting to a lower level of the control hierarchy for the primary chemical hazard.
Incorrect: Continuing the use of RPE when a functional engineering control is available fails to meet the legal requirement to apply the hierarchy of controls. Increasing the frequency of face-fit testing improves the reliability of the RPE but does not satisfy the requirement to prioritize collective protection over individual protection. Reclassifying substances without a rigorous toxicological basis to circumvent safety requirements is a violation of risk assessment principles and professional ethics.
Takeaway: Engineering controls must always be prioritized over personal protective equipment, and secondary hazards arising from these controls must be managed independently without compromising primary safety measures.
-
Question 8 of 10
8. Question
Excerpt from a transaction monitoring alert: In work related to OHS for the Laboratory and Research Sector as part of data protection at a fintech lender, it was noted that a newly commissioned high-performance computing cooling research facility has introduced several novel chemical refrigerants for thermal testing. During a 12-month internal audit of the facility’s safety management system, it was discovered that while Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) are present, the specific exposure monitoring for volatile organic compounds (VOCs) has not been updated to reflect the increased throughput of the new testing phase. As the Health and Safety Manager, what is the most appropriate action to ensure compliance with the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and COSHH?
Correct
Correct: Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations, risk assessments must be reviewed if there is reason to suspect they are no longer valid or if there has been a significant change in the work. The introduction of new chemicals and increased throughput constitutes a significant change. A formal review is necessary to evaluate the adequacy of existing controls and to determine if health surveillance is required under COSHH Regulation 11.
Incorrect: Increasing inspection frequency is a useful monitoring tool but does not fulfill the legal requirement to re-evaluate the risk assessment following a significant change in process. Issuing respiratory protective equipment as a first step violates the hierarchy of controls, which requires that engineering and administrative controls be prioritized over PPE. Digitalizing MSDS improves information accessibility but does not address the fundamental need to assess the risks associated with the new substances and increased exposure levels.
Takeaway: Significant changes in laboratory processes or hazardous substances necessitate a formal review of risk assessments to ensure control measures and health surveillance remain legally compliant and effective.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH) Regulations, risk assessments must be reviewed if there is reason to suspect they are no longer valid or if there has been a significant change in the work. The introduction of new chemicals and increased throughput constitutes a significant change. A formal review is necessary to evaluate the adequacy of existing controls and to determine if health surveillance is required under COSHH Regulation 11.
Incorrect: Increasing inspection frequency is a useful monitoring tool but does not fulfill the legal requirement to re-evaluate the risk assessment following a significant change in process. Issuing respiratory protective equipment as a first step violates the hierarchy of controls, which requires that engineering and administrative controls be prioritized over PPE. Digitalizing MSDS improves information accessibility but does not address the fundamental need to assess the risks associated with the new substances and increased exposure levels.
Takeaway: Significant changes in laboratory processes or hazardous substances necessitate a formal review of risk assessments to ensure control measures and health surveillance remain legally compliant and effective.
-
Question 9 of 10
9. Question
A new business initiative at a payment services provider requires guidance on Fire Safety and Emergency Preparedness as part of periodic review. The proposal raises questions about the transition of the organization’s disaster recovery site to a fully operational 24/7 data processing hub. The Health and Safety Manager is tasked with reviewing the existing emergency arrangements to ensure they align with the requirements of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. The review identifies that while the physical fire controls are adequate, the emergency plan has not been tested for scenarios involving minimum staffing levels during public holidays. Which action should the manager prioritize to validate the effectiveness of the emergency preparedness framework?
Correct
Correct: Conducting a functional test during minimum occupancy is the most effective way to validate the emergency preparedness framework. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and ISO 45001 standards, emergency procedures must be tested and proven effective for all foreseeable circumstances. Testing with a skeleton crew identifies whether the remaining staff can perform necessary roles (such as fire wardens or first aiders) and whether communication with external emergency services remains robust without the usual management support structure.
Incorrect: Distributing the plan for digital signatures is a passive administrative task that ensures awareness but does not validate the actual effectiveness of the response in a real-time scenario. Installing additional fire-rated partitions is an engineering control for property protection and fire containment, but it does not address the procedural or human-element gaps in the emergency response plan. Updating the Fire Risk Assessment to label the risk as ‘tolerable’ without active validation is a failure of professional judgment, as it relies on assumptions rather than evidence-based testing of the emergency arrangements.
Takeaway: Emergency preparedness must be validated through practical testing under various operational conditions, including minimum staffing, to ensure that procedural controls are resilient and effective.
Incorrect
Correct: Conducting a functional test during minimum occupancy is the most effective way to validate the emergency preparedness framework. Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 and ISO 45001 standards, emergency procedures must be tested and proven effective for all foreseeable circumstances. Testing with a skeleton crew identifies whether the remaining staff can perform necessary roles (such as fire wardens or first aiders) and whether communication with external emergency services remains robust without the usual management support structure.
Incorrect: Distributing the plan for digital signatures is a passive administrative task that ensures awareness but does not validate the actual effectiveness of the response in a real-time scenario. Installing additional fire-rated partitions is an engineering control for property protection and fire containment, but it does not address the procedural or human-element gaps in the emergency response plan. Updating the Fire Risk Assessment to label the risk as ‘tolerable’ without active validation is a failure of professional judgment, as it relies on assumptions rather than evidence-based testing of the emergency arrangements.
Takeaway: Emergency preparedness must be validated through practical testing under various operational conditions, including minimum staffing, to ensure that procedural controls are resilient and effective.
-
Question 10 of 10
10. Question
Senior management at a wealth manager requests your input on Laboratory Safety as part of record-keeping. Their briefing note explains that the firm’s specialized document verification lab is introducing a new high-purity chemical reagent for forensic ink analysis. As the lead health and safety practitioner, you are tasked with ensuring the transition adheres to the 12-month review cycle and statutory requirements under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. Which action best demonstrates the application of the hierarchy of controls and regulatory compliance for this new process?
Correct
Correct: Under the COSHH Regulations and the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations, employers must conduct a specific risk assessment before any new hazardous substance is used. The hierarchy of controls must be applied, which mandates that engineering controls (like local exhaust ventilation) which protect everyone in the vicinity must be prioritized over personal protective equipment (PPE), which only protects the individual wearer and is more prone to failure or misuse.
Incorrect: Distributing a Safety Data Sheet is a source of information but does not constitute a risk assessment, and prioritizing PPE violates the hierarchy of controls. Relying on a general risk register and delaying monitoring for six months fails to address the immediate risks of the new substance before exposure occurs. Revising a high-level policy and obtaining training signatures are administrative actions that do not fulfill the requirement for a substantive, task-specific risk assessment and the implementation of physical control measures.
Takeaway: Effective laboratory safety management requires a proactive, task-specific risk assessment that prioritizes collective engineering controls over individual personal protective equipment.
Incorrect
Correct: Under the COSHH Regulations and the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations, employers must conduct a specific risk assessment before any new hazardous substance is used. The hierarchy of controls must be applied, which mandates that engineering controls (like local exhaust ventilation) which protect everyone in the vicinity must be prioritized over personal protective equipment (PPE), which only protects the individual wearer and is more prone to failure or misuse.
Incorrect: Distributing a Safety Data Sheet is a source of information but does not constitute a risk assessment, and prioritizing PPE violates the hierarchy of controls. Relying on a general risk register and delaying monitoring for six months fails to address the immediate risks of the new substance before exposure occurs. Revising a high-level policy and obtaining training signatures are administrative actions that do not fulfill the requirement for a substantive, task-specific risk assessment and the implementation of physical control measures.
Takeaway: Effective laboratory safety management requires a proactive, task-specific risk assessment that prioritizes collective engineering controls over individual personal protective equipment.