OHS

Home » Resources » Dictionary » Terms

Definition - What does OHS mean?

OHS is an acronym for Occupational Health and Safety (OHS), serving as a format based on a set of laws and rules that govern methods to help limit or avoid illness or injury cases that can occur on the job. A regulated template of worker health and safety plays off the implied duty by employers to keep a workplace free of hazards aligned with OHS standards.

SureHire explains OHS

In recent years, the Occupational Health and Safety Act has made amendments to laws that give companies more discretion to use OHS tools to prioritize the safety of their workers. While compliance with OHS guidelines is a blanket mechanism to curb hazard risks, employers can face legal blowback to make OHS rules stand. For instance, a business must ensure a safe workplace yet is exempt from managing a hazard unless it poses a direct threat to the party(s) involved. This variation to the OHS Act also creates nuanced terms when a worker lodges a refusal to work complaint where the safety of other workers in an area can be at risk.

 

The OHS database is a system for employers to look at records that translate to their field industry and the rules that apply to the type of job that an employee must follow. Though compliance with OHS rules has an overlap in scope based on the jurisdiction laws in provinces across Canada, an employer must treat OHS measures as a criterion to keep their workforce safe from hazards.

Subscribe to SureNews!

Get your Reasonable Suspicion Checklist! Join our community and get access to more resources like this! Emails are sent monthly, so no need to worry, we will not fill up your inbox.