Continuing Education / Outreach

Chemical Hazards in the Workplace/Hazard Communication


Dates: Location:

Wednesday, April 7, 2010
8:00 am - 5:00 pm (registration - 7:30 am)

UCLA

Fee:  

Standard
$249

Early bird (before 3/6/2010)
$149

Fee includes course manual, refreshments, parking ( Parking is only free if instructions are followed.)

Payment Terms (rev. 11/6/09): Substitutions may be made without additional charge. Cancellations must be in writing. Refund schedule:

Cancellation 15 or more business days before the class 80% of registration fee

Cancellation 7-14 business days before the class 50%

Cancellation less than 7 days before the class and "no shows" No refund

If course materials such as books have been sent to course participants in advance, the cost of that material will be subtracted from the refund.

UCLA reserves the right to postpone an offering 7 days prior to the course date should minimum enrollment requirements not be met. If a program is canceled, you will be notified and your registration fee will be refunded in full, less the cost of course materials sent in advance if they are not returned in the condition in which they were received. The liability of UCLA is limited to the course fee.


Overview:  

The Chemical Awareness class is intended for those people who work with or around chemicals in their workplace or on a regular basis in other settings. Participants should have a basic knowledge of chemicals, either through a high school level chemistry curriculum, or experience around chemicals in the workplace.

Participants will examine the basic properties of chemicals as they are applicable to the workplace, including the classes of chemicals, the properties of chemicals, how chemicals are used in some work environments, and how they are stored. Participants will also learn how to gather and analyze information about the many chemicals they may encounter in the workplace. They will do this with a hands-on exercise to demonstrate how to use MSDS sheets to gather critical information needed to assess risk. Participants will also learn how to protect themselves against exposure to chemicals, by first examining the routes of exposure, and determining the most effective methods for personal protection.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:

1. Determine the hazardous properties of common chemicals using MSDS sheets and other resources.

2. Segregate and store classes of chemicals according to likely hazards.

3. Protect themselves against hazards from chemicals in the workplace


Who Should Attend:  

Health and Safety Professionals, Industrial Hygienists, Safety Engineers, Labor/Management Health and Safety Committee Members, Supervisors, Union representatives, Risk Managers, Loss Control Specialists. Ideal candidates have responsibilities that include safety from firms that recognize safety as a paramount function. The ChemicalHazards class is intended for those people who work with or around chemicals in their workplace or on a regular basis in other settings. Participants should have a basic knowledge of chemicals, either through a high school level chemistry curriculum, or experience around chemicals in the workplace.


Agenda / Topics :  

 

  • I . Chemicals

    Classes – acids, bases, air and water reactive chemicals, toxics, carcinogens, solvents, radioactive materials.

    Properties – volatility, density, solubility, toxicity, incompatibilities

    Uses – manufacturing, laboratories, medical, cleaning, mixing

    Storage – locations, classifications, segregation

  • 2 . Information Gathering

Hazard Communication Standard – employer/employee responsibilities

Sources – MSDS, on-line data bases, texts, manufacturers information

MSDS – How to use and evaluate; hands -on exercise using MSDS

  • 3 . Protection against exposure

Routes of exposure – absorption, inhalation, ingestion, injection

Hierarchy of controls – engineering, administrative, PPE

PPE – gloves, masks, respirators, protective clothing, boots

Training requirements – understanding, proper fit, limitations


Faculty:  

Robert Phalen, PhD, CIH, CHMM

Bob Phalen is a Certified Industrial Hygienist and holds a doctorate in environmental health sciences from University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) where he conducted research on personal protective equipment. Mr. Phalen’s background includes five years experience with UCLA’s Environment, Health and Safety department and as an industrial hygienist for a California-based third party workers’ compensation administrator. He has more than 9 years experience in the practice of industrial hygiene, environmental health, and ergonomics. Since 2001, he has presented at national conferences on the topics of ergonomics and personal protective clothing. Starting in September of 2006 he will be a faculty member in Environmental Health Sciences at California State University San Bernardino.


Professional Points:

  • ABIH— 1.0 Certification of Maintenance Points from the American Board of Industrial Hygiene have been approved or applied for
  • Provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider #13555 (SCERC) for 8 contact hours.
  • BCSP and Continuing Education Units — Eligible for .75 Continuation of Certification Points/CEUs for each course

To register by phone - 310 206-2304

To register by fax - 310 794-9317

Click Here to Register on-line

Click Here to Download Registration Form