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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Workplace Health and Safety: Employer Basics

TS行政書士
Fachlich geprüft von Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Zugelassener Verwaltungsberater, JapanAlle MmowW-Inhalte werden von einem staatlich lizenzierten Experten für Regulierungskonformität betreut.
Meet your health and safety obligations as an employer across 7 countries. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps prepare H&S policy documents, risk assessments, and compliance records. Workplace health and safety is not an optional compliance exercise — it is a fundamental legal obligation in every jurisdiction. Employers who fail to meet health and safety duties can face criminal prosecution, unlimited fines, and civil claims from injured workers. More importantly, preventable workplace injuries and illnesses cause real harm to real people.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Every employer has a legal duty to protect employees' health, safety, and welfare at work. This requires a written health and safety policy (if you have 5+ employees in the UK), risk assessments, adequate training, and a system for reporting and investigating incidents.

What You Need to Know

Workplace health and safety is not an optional compliance exercise — it is a fundamental legal obligation in every jurisdiction. Employers who fail to meet health and safety duties can face criminal prosecution, unlimited fines, and civil claims from injured workers. More importantly, preventable workplace injuries and illnesses cause real harm to real people.

The good news is that most health and safety obligations are achievable through systematic, documented processes rather than complex specialist knowledge. Identifying hazards, assessing risks, implementing controls, and training employees are the four pillars of workplace safety compliance in every country.

This guide provides a practical overview of the key obligations for employers, covering documentation requirements, incident reporting, and the most common areas of risk.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

The Employer's General Duty

In all seven jurisdictions, employers owe a general duty of care to ensure the health and safety of employees at work "so far as is reasonably practicable" (UK), or "as far as reasonably practicable" (Australia), or to "take all reasonable precautions" (Canada). The standard of "reasonable practicability" means balancing the severity and likelihood of harm against the cost and practicality of preventing it.

This general duty encompasses:

Written Health and Safety Policy

In the UK, employers with five or more employees must have a written health and safety policy. This policy must state the employer's commitment to health and safety, who is responsible for it, and the arrangements in place to manage safety. A written policy is also required or strongly recommended under health and safety legislation in Australia, Canada, and most other jurisdictions.

The policy is a living document — it should be reviewed when there are significant changes to the workplace or workforce, and at least annually.

Risk Assessment

Risk assessment is the cornerstone of health and safety management. Employers must:

  1. Identify hazards — anything that could cause harm (machinery, chemicals, falls, manual handling, stress, violence)
  2. Assess the risk — who might be harmed, and how likely and severe is the harm
  3. Implement controls — eliminate or reduce the risk to an acceptable level
  4. Record the assessment — if you have 5+ employees in the UK, recording is a legal requirement
  5. Review and update — when circumstances change or an incident occurs

Risk assessments must be "suitable and sufficient" — not exhaustive documents, but appropriate to the level of risk in the workplace.

Training and Instruction

Employees must receive adequate training and instruction to work safely. This includes:

Training records must be maintained. In the event of an accident, being able to demonstrate that relevant training was provided and understood is a critical defence.

Incident Reporting

Workplace incidents — injuries, near-misses, dangerous occurrences, and occupational diseases — must be recorded and, where they meet a defined threshold, reported to the relevant regulator.

In the UK, RIDDOR (Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013) requires employers to report:

In Australia, Safe Work Australia sets the national framework, with state-based regulators (e.g., WorkSafe Victoria, SafeWork NSW) managing reporting requirements. Serious injuries must generally be notified immediately. In Canada, provincial Workplace Safety and Insurance Boards (WSIBs) manage reporting and compensation.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Main Legislation Written Policy Required? Regulator Key Source
🇬🇧 UK Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 Yes (5+ employees) HSE hse.gov.uk
🇫🇷 France Labour Code (Code du travail) Yes DREAL/DIRECCTE travail-emploi.gouv.fr
🇸🇪 Sweden Work Environment Act (1977:1160) Yes Arbetsmiljöverket av.se
🇦🇺 Australia Work Health and Safety Act 2011 Yes Safe Work Australia safeworkaustralia.gov.au
🇳🇿 New Zealand Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 Yes WorkSafe NZ worksafe.govt.nz
🇨🇦 Canada Canada Labour Code (Pt II) + provincial Yes CCOHS / provincial ccohs.ca
🇺🇸 USA Occupational Safety and Health Act 1970 Yes (10+ employees) OSHA osha.gov

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Treating health and safety as a one-time compliance exercise. Health and safety must be ongoing — regular inspections, risk assessment reviews, toolbox talks, and incident analysis keep the management system alive. A policy written three years ago and never reviewed is unlikely to be "suitable and sufficient."
  2. Not conducting workplace risk assessments before starting activities. Employers sometimes begin operations and then write the risk assessment afterwards. The assessment should precede the work so that controls can be implemented before harm occurs.
  3. Ignoring stress and mental health hazards. Work-related stress is the most common cause of workplace absence in many jurisdictions. The employer's general duty of care includes psychological health. A stress risk assessment is good practice and increasingly expected by regulators.
  4. Failing to investigate near-misses. Near-miss incidents often precede serious accidents. A robust near-miss reporting culture — where employees feel safe reporting without fear of blame — enables you to address risks before someone is injured.
  5. Not having adequate first aid provision. Every workplace must have an adequate number of trained first aiders and an appropriately stocked first aid kit. The number of first aiders required depends on workplace size, type of activity, and distance from emergency services.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Prepare your health and safety documentation:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified health and safety professional or attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do I need a health and safety policy for just one employee?

A: In the UK, the legal requirement for a written policy applies to employers with five or more employees. However, even with fewer staff, you still have all the other health and safety duties — risk assessment, training, adequate welfare facilities, and incident reporting. For very small employers, a simple but documented approach to risk management is strongly advisable.

Q: What is a "responsible person" and do I need one?

A: In the UK fire safety context, the "responsible person" must carry out fire risk assessments and implement fire safety measures. For general health and safety, someone in the organisation must have designated responsibility for health and safety management. In larger organisations this might be a dedicated health and safety manager; in small businesses, it is often the owner or a manager who has received appropriate training.

Q: Can I be personally prosecuted for health and safety failures?

A: Yes. Directors and senior managers can be personally prosecuted for health and safety offences in the UK (under the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 and the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974), Australia, Canada, and other jurisdictions. Personal liability is particularly likely where there is evidence that a director personally influenced or was responsible for the failure.

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