The ingredients of a sound chemical safety program include an accurate chemical inventory, on-demand safety data sheets (SDS) and an efficient, yet robust chemical approval process. While there are many approaches to track chemical inventories and approvals, there are some best practices to achieve chemical compliance and ease the burden of managing your chemical inventories. […]

Read More

Social responsibility is an important part of our focus at the Health & Safety Institute. Each year, we select non-profits near our corporate locations to lend support to financially, with volunteer hours and with donation drives. This allows us to build meaningful partnerships and directly address the most important needs for organizations in the communities […]

Read More

 The American Safety & Health Institute (ASHI) and MEDIC First Aid training programs are managed through our user-friendly online administration system. Our Tech Support crew has compiled some FAQs about using the system and have shared their answers in today’s blog post. from HSI Blog https://ift.tt/2mcc6HQ Book your training today.

Read More

Reauthorization vs renewal. Update vs upgrade. The latest edition of the Training Center Administrative Manual (TCAM) is now available, and HSI’s Regulatory team has included some keywords to be sure our American Safety & Health Institute (ASHI) and MEDIC First Aid instructors and Training Center directors understand these important terms. from HSI Blog https://ift.tt/2IWH4Nj Book […]

Read More

Student leadership skills, public speaking practice, and bystander emergency care training – it all comes together when a group of teens established their own ASHI Training Center (TC) to teach their peers and their community the lifesaving skills of compression-only CPR. from HSI Blog https://ift.tt/2lCdNOI Book your training today.

Read More

When people are injured or suddenly fall ill, the scene around them is often chaotic. Concerned bystanders, family members and emergency services personnel are all reacting and responding to the incident simultaneously, and the incident scene itself may pose dangers. An emergency care provider knows to put his or her own safety first, even before […]

Read More