CompScience Debuts AI Safety Platform for Frontline Workers
New software uses artificial intelligence and National Safety Council modeling to identify workplace hazards through mobile photography.
- By Jesse Jacobs
- Apr 14, 2026
CompScience announced the launch of its Safe Work Plan platform, a mobile tool designed to automate risk mitigation for frontline employees. The platform utilizes artificial intelligence to identify workplace hazards based on the National Safety Council Serious Incident and Fatality Prevention Model.
The technology allows workers to photograph a worksite and provide a brief description of the task at hand. The AI then analyzes the environment and conditions to identify potential hazards within seconds. Each plan generates a risk score and suggests specific safeguards for workers to verify before beginning operations.
The platform aims to move safety culture away from lagging indicators, such as injury rates, toward proactive risk management. By placing safety data directly in the hands of employees, the tool facilitates communication between workers and supervisors to standardize safety protocols across various job sites.
According to the National Safety Council, more than 4,000 people die annually from preventable workplace incidents. The SIF Prevention Model integrated into the software provides a framework for organizations to control high-risk tasks that frequently lead to severe injuries or fatalities.
The platform also addresses the administrative burden of maintaining Job Safety Analyses. While federal safety standards require organizations to document hazard recognition, manual paperwork is often difficult to maintain in real time. The new software generates this documentation automatically during the workflow, intended to simplify OSHA review and compliance.
The Safe Work Plan platform is currently being piloted by several major industrial firms. A version of the software has been made available to the public to provide small businesses and individual workers with access to the safety tool.
About the Author
Jesse Jacobs is assistant editor of OHSOnline.com.