PUBH X602 - Introduction to Occupational Hygiene: Risk Assessment Principles
Description
Prior to accessing your first module in the Occupational and Nanotechnology Health and Safety series, we need you to complete a short survey. This information will satisfy our funding requirements and tell us who is interested in learning about occupational and nanotechnology health and safety. Once you have completed and submitted the survey, you have access to all the modules without repeating the survey. There are 19 modules in the series. You may take these modules in sequence or at your own discretion. Thank you for your interest in the METPHAST Modules.
Risk Assessment Principles
(This module is one of 5 units comprising the first section of METPHAST: Introduction to Occupational Hygiene. There are 15 modules on Nanotechnology Health and Safety, as well. See the section "Additional Information" for more details about these modules.)
This module will cover risk assessment principles including:
- Exposure assessment strategies
- Health effect studies
- Risk characterization
- Risk management
Objectives
By the end of the module, learners should be able to:
- Describe how the severity of occupational hazards is expressed
- Identify strategies to assess worker exposures to potential hazards
- Illustrate how hazard severity and exposure are combined to characterize risk
- Explain approaches to managing risk once it has been characterized
Continuing Education Units
Please note that these trainings may offer different types of continuing education credits. This Learner Portal may not calculate the correct number of continuing education credits. Please refer to the Continuing Education Credits section of your course site after registration for the correct information.
This course is eligible for 0.1 CEUs or 1.0 contact hours and up to 1 CPH re-certification credits can be earned by completing this course.
Contact & Questions
For questions regarding course registration, materials, and content, please email cpheo@umn.edu.
For questions regarding system access, log-in, user name, or password, please email help@umn.edu or call 612-301-4357.