Creating a Standard Operating Procedure for Work-Related Incidents

Author, Drew Garcia, Vice President, Landscape Group, Rancho Mesa Insurance Services, Inc.

In order to improve a process, there needs to be a baseline. When it comes to tracking, reporting, and following through on a work-related incident, injury or illness, creating a standard operating procedure (SOP) sets the foundation.

Flow charts can help all stakeholders better visualize the process and show potential next steps based on yes/no questions. This type of operating procedure also shows the duties and obligations for the individual employee, supervisor, human resources personnel and safety manager that is involved.

This process will ensure your employee receives the timely care they need based on the particular circumstances and provide your staff the confidence that they are accurately handling the situation.

Other areas to consider within this work flow can be:

  • OSHA reporting requirements

  • OSHA recordkeeping

  • Initial incident report

  • Supervisor’s report

  • Witness statements

  • State-specific requirements

  • Follow up reports to address the root cause and prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.

Standardizing your injury reporting protocol is the first step to getting the appropriate care, minimizing the incident’s claim impact, and providing you training opportunities to reduce the risk of a similar claim reoccurring. As your business continues to evolve and grow, it is critical that you establish a protocol as your foundation and continue to fine tune it as new departments are created or areas for improvement are observed.

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