A Quick Glance

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    Workplace’s health and safety skills

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    Guaranteed best price in the industry

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    Designed for managers and supervisors

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    Key learning points and tutor support

The organisation’s safety is very important. There is the necessity of skills that ensure the workplace security. The professional with these skills are the ones who recognise hazards and avoid them. To deliver complete security to your organisation, you should gain these skills.

Secure business environments inspire our NEBOSH Award in Health and Safety at Work. You can start by gaining the following skills that the successful experts have:

  • They work with policies: To apply security in the workplace, there is need to obey policies. You should understand all these policies very well.
  • They identify risks: Business environments resolve risks.

Who should take this course

This course is designed for the following professionals:

  • Managers
  • Supervisors
  • Leaders
  • HR Professionals
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Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course.

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What Will You Learn

The purpose of this course is to acquaint you:

  • With basic knowledge of safety and health
  • To understand principles of fire safety
  • To understand the control measures for the electricity safety
  • With the knowledge of prevention measures of fire hazards
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What's included

  Course Overview

The NEBOSH Award in Health and Safety at Work course covers fundamentals of health and safety. It includes knowledge of fire prevention, hazardous safety and electricity safety. Our instructors are expert in all these domains. After attending the NEBOSH course, You can apply principles to your workplace.

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  Course Content

Module1: Fundamentals of Health and Safety

  • Summary of health and safety
  • Necessity of principles of health and safety
  • Sources of health and safety

Module2: An Overview of principles of fire and safety

  • Roles and responsibilities of safety principles
  • Managing health and safety
  • Causes of an accident in an organisation
  • inspecting accidents

Module3:  An introduction to fire causes and prevention

  • Causes of fire in an organisation
  • What are the control events to minimise the fire risks?

Module4:  Hazards and controls related to Work Equipment

  • What are the health and safety necessities?
  • Discuss hazards related to work equipment

Module5: An overview of transport safety

  • The summary of transportation risks
  • The control measures to reduce the transportation hazards

Module6: The summary of electricity safety

  • An overview electricity hazardous
  • The control actions to decrease the electricity hazards

Module7: Manual Handling

  • Manual handling risks
  • The control measures to reduce the manual handling

Module8: Handling hazardous substance

  • Identifying routes of handling the dangerous substance
  • Efforts to measure the health risks of hazardous substance

Module9: Hazards of Work environments

  • Deliberate standard safety requirements, risks and controls
  • Psychosocial hazards
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NEBOSH

What is NEBOSH certificate?

NEBOSH stands for National Examination Board in Occupational Safety and Health. It is a UK based examination board. It offers the qualifications in health, safety and environment. It was established in 1979. NEBOSH outlines the syllabus and method of assessment. It does not provide certifications. Best training providers offer the courses.

Benefits of NEBOSH exam:

For employers:

  • Examine that whether the workplace is safe or not?
  • Confirms that the employees recognise all kinds of risks
  • Shows the promise of employees towards health and safety

For employees:

  • It is a stepping stone for constructing a career in health and safety.
  • NEBOSH training provides skills that help you to perform best in the workplace.

History of NEBOSH:

The first NEBOSH examinations procured in June 1980. Applicants sit down for five papers; Law; Behavioral Science; Techniques of Safety Management; Occupational Health & Hygiene and General Science. In October 1981 membership of the NEBOSH Board was grown and comprised governments from IOSH UK government sections, various teaching formations and the Royal Society for the Anticipation of Accidents. The salutation of NEBOSH qualifications also prompted to grow around this time. In June 1982, 140 people counted for their NEBOSH Normal level certificate and 84 for the higher level certificate. By 1986, NEBOSH had increased the number of annual examination assemblies from two to three. In February 1987 NEBOSH familiarised a new qualification construction, which comprised a Certificate and a Diploma. In 1988 the Diploma level qualification was altered to feature four 3 hour exams and conclusion of a case study. Applicants scoring over 75% attained a distinction.

In the early 1990s, NEBOSH initiated to separate itself from IOSH formally. In March 1992, NEBOSH combined as a limited company with Companies House. In April 1992, NEBOSH listed as a charity with the Charity Commission and then appointed its first Chief Executive, Martin Shuttle worth, two months later. In December 1992, the NEBOSH Specialist Environmental Diploma was pushed, trailed shortly by the NEBOSH Construction Certificate. In June 1997 NEBOSH presented a credit mark to validate a high score in an exam - sitting just below a distinction. The two-part Diploma was presented in June 1998. NEBOSH enthused offices to Meridian Business Park, Leicester in 1999.

Stephen Vickers acquired up to the position of NEBOSH Chief Executive in April 2000. Six months later the Experiences and Curriculum Authority (QCA) - now The Office of the Qualifications and Examinations Regulator (Ofqual) credited NEBOSH as a donation body. In March 2001, designator letters were presented for owners of NEBOSH higher level awards. In September 2001, almost 22 years after the creation of NEBOSH, Dolores Lavander of West Midlands Fire Service (WMFS) became the 50,000th NEBOSH examination candidate. A performance to mark the event was held at WMFS head office. More new qualifications, the NEBOSH Fire Certificate and NEBOSH International General Certificate, were launched. Current NEBOSH Chief Managerial, Teresa Budworth, appropriated up her role in March 2006. Two months later the first ever NEBOSH Graduation Ceremony took place at the University of Warwick. A further landmark was attained in June 2006 when the 100,000th NEBOSH General Certificate was given to David Marsh. In October 2006, NEBOSH enthused offices to its current location of 5 Dominus Way, Meridian Business Park, Leicester.



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About Gloucester

Gloucester is a county city in Gloucestershire located in the south-west of England. Gloucester deceits close to the Welsh border, on the River Severn, between the Cotswolds to the east and the Forest of Dean to the south-west. King Henry II granted its first charter in 1155. Frugally, the city is conquered by the service industries, and has a high monetary and business sector and was protuberant in the atmosphere manufacturing.

Geography:

Gloucester is the regional town of Gloucestershire. It is the 53rd largest settlement in the UK. Its population was 110,600 in 2002. By 2011 the city had a population of 121,900, and by 2012 its population was 123,400. Growth feasts outside city limits, with many remote regions. The 2011 survey reports the population of the Gloucester as 149,820.

The city lies on the eastern bank of the River Severn. It is sheltered by the Cotswolds to the east, while the Forest of Dean and the Malvern Hills rise to the west and north. The wharfs, granaries and the docks themselves fell into disorder until their face-lift in the 1980s. They now form a public open space. Some granaries now house the Gloucester Waterways Museum and others were rehabilitated into housing flats, shops and bars. Moreover, the Gloucestershire Museum's soldiers is located in the Custom House. Next to the gallery is Gloucester Yacht Club. The port motionless houses the most inland RNLI lifeboat in the United Kingdom.

Attractions:

Gloucester Cathedral, in the north of the city near the river, creates the basis of an abbey devoted to Saint Peter in 681. It is the burial home of King Edward II and Walter de Lacy. The cathedral is very famous as it was used in the films like Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and much more. 

Many feudal and Tudor period gabled and half-timbered houses endure from previous eras of Gloucester's history. At the point where the four principal roads crossed stood the Tolsey, which was relieved by a modern building in 1894. None of the old public structures is left but for the New Inn in Northgate Street. It is a forested house, with strong, enormous external colonnades and patios. It was built around 1450 by John Twyning, a monk.

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