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According to OSHA standards, which injuries must be recorded on Form 300 even if they don't result in lost work time?

Correct Answer

B) Injuries requiring prescription medication

OSHA requires recording any work-related injury that requires medical treatment beyond first aid, including prescription medications, even if no work time is lost. First aid treatments and over-the-counter medications typically don't require recording.

Answer Options
A
All first aid treatments
B
Injuries requiring prescription medication
C
Minor cuts and bruises
D
Injuries treated only with over-the-counter medication

Why This Is the Correct Answer

OSHA Form 300 recording requirements are triggered when an injury requires medical treatment beyond basic first aid, regardless of whether work time is lost. Prescription medications constitute medical treatment that goes beyond first aid care. This means that even if an employee continues working after receiving prescription medication for a work-related injury, the incident must still be recorded on Form 300. The key distinction is between first aid (which doesn't require recording) and medical treatment (which does require recording).

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: All first aid treatments

First aid treatments are specifically excluded from OSHA Form 300 recording requirements. OSHA defines first aid as basic care that can be provided without medical training, such as cleaning minor cuts, applying bandages, or using non-prescription medications. Recording all first aid treatments would create an excessive administrative burden and is not required by OSHA standards.

Option C: Minor cuts and bruises

Minor cuts and bruises that only require basic first aid treatment (cleaning, bandaging, over-the-counter pain relief) do not need to be recorded on Form 300. These fall under the first aid exception to OSHA recording requirements. Only when such injuries require medical treatment beyond first aid do they become recordable.

Option D: Injuries treated only with over-the-counter medication

Over-the-counter medications are considered part of first aid treatment under OSHA standards. Since first aid treatments are not required to be recorded on Form 300, injuries treated only with non-prescription medications would not trigger recording requirements. The distinction is between over-the-counter (first aid) and prescription (medical treatment) medications.

Memory Technique

Think 'Prescription = Record' - any work injury requiring prescription medication crosses the line from first aid to medical treatment and must be documented.

Reference Hint

OSHA 29 CFR 1904 - Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses, specifically sections 1904.4-1904.7 covering recording criteria

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