The 62nd annual conference presented the Governor’s Lifesaving Award to 40 men and women.
The U.S. Department of Energy puts $60 million into training the next generation's nuclear energy leaders.
The EPA administrator and secretary of energy will participate in a White House Google+ Hangout starting at 12:15 p.m. EDT.
The agency's rule will require most Class III devices, such as automated external defibrillators, to have unique device identifiers on their label and packaging within a year.
New clean-energy rules make some worry about the safety of plant workers and the public.
The Department of Labor extends the Fair Labor Standards Act's overtime and minimum wage protections to direct care workers, effective Jan. 1, 2015.
A Brooklyn outpost of the national pharmacy chain is cited for several violations.
Instead of sharing inspection responsibility with OSHA as it has the last year, the HIOSH will return to monitoring workplace safety in the manufacturing sector.
According to a new study from JOEM, companies who have a "healthy workplace" environment may outperform those who don't.
New research shows that TBBPA may cause cancer by interfering with workers' hormones and stimulating estrogen activity.
The Mine Safety and Health Administration introduces a tool that lets mine operators know when they're successfully reducing violations.
Due to unsafe and risky work conditions, BART workers have requested changes they may not receive.
This triggers the 90-day countdown to the deadline for filing comments on a proposal that is the most important regulatory action by OSHA this year, so far.
ChemView displays health and safety data, making it possible to compare chemicals by use and by health or environmental effects, and it allows searches by chemical name or Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) number, use, hazard effect, or regulatory action
It will help physicians cope with the tougher environment after revisions take effect Sept. 23, 2013, according to the organization.
The agency says because of the risks of overdose and death, these drugs should be reserved for use in patients for whom alternative treatment options are ineffective, not tolerated, or would be otherwise inadequate.
The national paper and cardboard manufacturer faces $185,000 in safety violation fines from OSHA
Due to new legislation, workers and employers in Alberta may have to pay fines for violating safety protocol