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 Occupational Safety and Health
 General Controls
 Good Working Positions
 Monitors
 Keyboards
 Pointer/Mouse
 Wrist/Palm Supports
 Document Holders
 Desks
 Chairs
 Telephones
 Awkward Postures
 Contact Stress
 Force
 Repetition
 Musculoskeletal Disorders
 Work Process and Recognition
 Workstation Environment
 Introduction to OSHA
 Occupational Safety and Health Summary
 Safety & Health Management Systems
 Helpful Statistics
 Costs of Accidents
 Safety & Health Integration
 Safety & Health Culture
 Safety & Health System Components
 Management Leadership and Employee Involvement
 Worksite Analysis
 Hazard Prevention and Control
 Safety & Health Training
 Obstacles to a Successful Safety and Health Program
 Strategic Map
 Management Processes
 OSHA Help for New Businesses

 

 

Helpful Statistics

About half the 95 million workers who would be covered under an OSHA safety and health program standard don't have that protection today.

  • Nearly 50 American workers are injured every minute of the 40-hour workweek and almost 17 die each day.
  • Since OSHA was created 28 years ago, workplace fatalities have been cut in half. Occupational injury and illness rates have been declining for the past five years. In 1997, they dropped to the lowest level since the U.S. began collecting this information.
  • Our premier partnership, the Voluntary Protection Program continues to pay big dividends. Today more than 500 workplaces, representing 180 industries, save $110 million each year because their injury rates are 50 percent below the average for their industries.
  • Nearly one-third of all serious occupational injuries and illnesses stem from overexertion or repetitive motion. These are disabling, expensive injuries. They cost our economy as much as $20 billion in direct costs and billions more in indirect costs.
  • Only about 30 percent of businesses have established safety and health programs. About half of the 95 million workers who would be covered under an OSHA safety and health program standard don't have that protection today. Establishing a safety and health program to prevent occupational injuries and illnesses is not only the right thing to do, it's the profitable thing to do. Studies have shown a $4 to $6 return for every dollar invested in safety and health.
  • Together federal and state OSHA programs have about 2,500 inspectors to cover more than 100 million workers at 6 million sites. That's one inspector for every 2,400 worksites and every 40,000 employees. That's why we can't depend on inspections alone to achieve our mission of protecting workers. At a rate of roughly 90,000 inspections per year, we'd visit each worksite once every 66 years!
  • Nearly 4,000 federal and state OSHA staff took one of our 78 courses at the OSHA Training Institute last year. Through our 12 education centers, an additional 7,300 individuals — mostly from the private sector — advanced their knowledge of occupational safety and health.