For the first time, the Work Health and Safety Regulations 2011 prescribe how employers must identify and manage hazards and risks to workers’ psychological health and safety.
Important changes to Commonwealth work health and safety laws are now in force.
For the first time, the Work Health and Safety Regulations 2011 prescribe how employers must identify and manage hazards and risks to workers’ psychological health and safety.
Comcare is providing ongoing support to help the jurisdiction prepare with published guidance and education products on psychosocial hazards and risks. This includes a new suite of guidance on work demands, a major cause of psychological injury across the scheme and a Prevention Strategy that focuses on common threats to psychological health and safety.
Additional guidance is available from Safe Work Australia’s model code of practice to help organisations comply with the new regulations:
Model Code of Practice: Managing psychosocial hazards at work | Safe Work Australia
The amended regulations came into effect on 1 April, defining important terms including ‘psychosocial hazard’ and ‘psychosocial risk’ and identifying the hazards employers must control in the workplace.
The model code of practice has important guidance relating to WHS duties, hazard identification and risk management, and identifies common workplace psychosocial hazards including:
Those with management and control of the workplace must use the hierarchy of controls to manage psychosocial risks, set out in the Work Health and Safety Regulations 2011. This is a step-by-step approach to eliminating or minimising risks, ranking controls from the highest to the lowest level of protection.