From the course: Occupational Safety and Health: Hazard Communication
Unlock the full course today
Join today to access over 24,200 courses taught by industry experts.
Understanding GHS labels and pictograms
From the course: Occupational Safety and Health: Hazard Communication
Understanding GHS labels and pictograms
- Under GHS, each hazardous chemical is required to have a label that includes very specific information that's meant to be easy to read and interpret. The labels must include all of the following: name, address, and telephone number, a product identifier, one or more pictograms, a single signal word, hazard statements and precautionary statements. So let's look at each of these. The name, address, and phone number are those of the manufacturer, or it could be the company that imported and is distributing the product in your country. The product identifier is some combination of the product name, product ID number, batch number, or some other unique way that the manufacturer chooses to identify this particular product. Now we discuss the pictograms in the last video and the label will include one or more of these pictograms, again, as a quick visual indicator to you of the hazards posed by the product. Next is…
Contents
-
-
-
Hazardous substances in the workplace2m 35s
-
(Locked)
The Globally Harmonized System of Classification (GHS)2m 27s
-
(Locked)
Hazards: Health, physical, environmental1m 24s
-
(Locked)
Categorizing hazards4m 43s
-
(Locked)
Understanding GHS labels and pictograms4m 39s
-
(Locked)
NFPA and DOT pictograms: Which do you use?3m 2s
-
-
-
-