This program covers all the key concepts of industrial hygiene, including anticipating, recognizing, evaluating, communicating, and control of workplace conditions that have the potential to cause occupational disease and illness. The program is aimed at individuals and managers who wish to learn more about or enhance their knowledge, industrial (occupational) hygiene.
Understand and apply the concepts of industrial hygiene
Perform Hazard identification tasks
Obtain an in-depth knowledge of the industrial hygiene range of topics
Learn about the different types of occupational diseases and illness conditions
Understand how to anticipate, recognize, evaluate, communicate, and control workplace conditions
The course is designed for everyone involved in safety, health, environmental, and management personnel who have industrial hygiene responsibilities, and for all personnel working in the catering field, offices, etc.
What is industrial hygiene?
Industrial hygiene management systems
Occupational exposure standards
Overview of the types of health risks
Occupational diseases and illness conditions
The human system (skeleton, muscles, nerves, circulation, respiratory, skin, sense organs, etc)
Methods of identifying health risks
Biological risks
Chemical risks
Physical risks
Radiation risks (ionizing and non-ionizing)
Exposure routes of hazardous substances
Health effects and classification of hazardous substances
Toxic, Irritant, Asphyxiant, and Anesthetic
Hepatoxic agents
Nephrotoxic agents
Neurotoxic agents
Blood damaging agents
Lung damaging agents
Recognition of potential health risks
A sampling of gases, vapors, and particulates
Walk-through surveys
Health surveillance programs
Health risk assessment reviews
Methods of controlling health risks
Determining health risk control methods
Biological monitoring and medical surveillance
Hearing conservation programs
Occupational diseases and illness condition prevention programs
The world is packed with information; and most organizations struggle to recognize what information they have, why they need it, how long they need it for, and if it has any value. Furthermore, changes in the law, such as the recent changes in the UAE employment law, often call for tighter controls on contract documentation, and lead to a need for enhanced management of human resource and contract records. In addition, electronic information is under threat from cyber-attack and personal information is at risk of exposure. As such, the development and implementation of a records management program that includes document control methods to identify, secure, and protect critical information, is necessary for every organization.
The world is packed with information; and most organizations struggle to recognize what information they have, why they need it, how long they need it for, and if it has any value. Furthermore, changes in the law, such as the recent changes in the UAE employment law, often call for tighter controls on contract documentation, and lead to a need for enhanced management of human resource and contract records. In addition, electronic information is under threat from cyber-attack and personal information is at risk of exposure. As such, the development and implementation of a records management program that includes document control methods to identify, secure, and protect critical information, is necessary for every organization.
Organizations typically start using electronic document management systems to transform paper-based operations after reaching an internal tipping point in which customer response times become too slow, departments don’t have enough bandwidth to solve recurring process bottlenecks, paper archiving becomes too costly or large-scale regulatory risks are exposed during a data breach or compliance fines.
For organizations that have defined but resource-intensive business processes, EDMS is an ideal fit. Document management helps organizations across industries sidestep this busy work entirely by eliminating manual document maintenance, reclaiming valuable staff time, and boosting the bottom-line.
It is universally recognized that for any company to succeed it must take a proactive approach to risk management. Over the last few years, Companies and several countries legislators have been focusing on Process Safety as a method to reduce the risks posed by hazardous industries. Process Hazard Analysis (PHA) is recognized as being a critical tool in the implementation of a successful risk management system
The level of competition in current business environments requires a focus on practices that assist in the management of personal and workgroup tasks, priorities, and projects. All types of organizations need to find more productive means to offer their products and/or services, so goals are established and tasks assigned to better meet customer and stakeholder needs. A focus on the use of productive practices allows for effective and efficient management of project work, establishing priorities and meeting deadlines, and is an important part of customer service.
Through training as a lead disaster recovery manager, you can gain the knowledge and skills required to assist a company in creating, administering, and executing a disaster recovery plan. You will learn about business continuity management's best practices for disaster recovery processes and ICT disaster recovery services throughout this training course.