Back injuries are common in many industries. They often develop over time from smaller strains or injuries. Learn about musculoskeletal injuries and how to prevent them. Back pain is one of the most common types of MSK injury.
Reaching, bending, or twisting while lifting
Bad body mechanics--how one lifts, pushes, pulls, or carries objects
Poor design of task method or workstation setup
Repetitive lifting of awkward items, equipment, or (in healthcare facilities) patients
Poor footing such as slippery floors, or constrained posture
Injuries to your back might happen quickly, or the effects of poor work practices and workspace ergonomics might take their toll over time. Regardless, pain and injuries are preventable through hazard- and employee self-awareness, properly designed and maintained work environments, and an overall understanding of the various sources of back strain.
The effects of accumulated back trauma can cause loss of work, decreased efficiency and overall safety, changes in mood, and even early career resignation.
This training teaches you to identify (and avoid) common hazards that contribute to back strain, how to better design and interact with your work environment (ergonomics), and how to catch early signs and symptoms of back injury.
Take this training to be purposeful in your compliance with OSHA’s General Duty Clause by defusing ergonomic hazards, avoiding back injuries (and the resulting injury reporting process), and keeping yourself and your coworkers or employees safe and productive.
This program is available with Amharic, Arabic, Bosnian, Creole, Croatian, French, Kurdish, Nepali, Spanish, Swahili, and Vietnamese closed captions.
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View this course in a classroom
environment, or assign it to your
team individually with testing
and recordkeeping capabilities.
Disclaimer: Back injuries can be acute or have slowly formed from repetitive job tasks or improper ergonomics. While back safety doesn’t have a specific standard, all back injuries are required to be reported and recognized under OSHA’s General Duty Clause (29 USC 654 S5). This training is intended to inform on back safety best practices to help prevent back related injuries. This training is for general purposes only and doesn’t replace any existing company policies or other OSHA standards related to recordable incidents. This training cannot be used to diagnose any back related injury or replace the need for a qualified medical professional in case of injury.