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Episode 10 - Hazardous Chemical Classifications - Pictograms
Episode 10

Episode 10 - Hazardous Chemical Classifications - Pictograms

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

November 13, 20228m 50s

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Show Notes

Episode 10 breaks down one of the most important foundations of chemical safety: how chemicals are classified under OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard (HazCom). Dr. Ayers explains that understanding chemical classifications isn’t just about compliance — it’s about recognizing the type of harm a chemical can cause so workers can choose the right controls, PPE, and emergency response actions.

The core message: Chemical classifications tell you the kind of danger you’re dealing with — physical, health, or environmental — and each category drives different protective measures.

  🧪 The Three Major Hazard Classes

OSHA’s HazCom system groups hazards into three broad categories:

  🟥 1. Physical Hazards

These relate to how a chemical behaves physically — especially its potential to ignite, explode, or react dangerously.

Examples include:

  • Flammable liquids

  • Combustible dusts

  • Oxidizers

  • Explosives

  • Pyrophorics

  • Corrosive to metals

  • Self‑reactive chemicals

  • Gases under pressure

Why it matters: Physical hazards drive controls like ventilation, bonding/grounding, storage requirements, and ignition‑source control.

  🟦 2. Health Hazards

These relate to how a chemical affects the human body.

Examples include:

  • Acute toxicity

  • Skin corrosion/irritation

  • Eye damage

  • Sensitizers

  • Carcinogens

  • Reproductive toxins

  • Respiratory hazards

  • Target organ effects

Why it matters: Health hazards determine PPE, exposure limits, medical surveillance, and training needs.

  🟩 3. Environmental Hazards

These relate to how a chemical affects the environment, especially aquatic life.

Examples include:

  • Acute aquatic toxicity

  • Chronic aquatic toxicity

Why it matters: Environmental hazards influence spill response, disposal, and storage practices.

  🧭 How Classifications Are Determined

Dr. Ayers explains that manufacturers classify chemicals based on:

  • Toxicology data

  • Physical testing

  • Reactivity information

  • Environmental impact data

  • Historical incident information

This classification then drives the pictograms, signal words, hazard statements, and precautionary statements found on labels and SDSs.

  🧯 Why Classifications Matter in the Workplace

Chemical classifications help workers understand:

  • What type of harm the chemical can cause

  • How quickly the hazard can occur

  • Whether the hazard is acute or chronic

  • What controls are required

  • What PPE is appropriate

  • How to store and handle the chemical safely

  • What to do in an emergency

Without understanding classifications, workers may underestimate risks or choose the wrong protective measures.

  🧰 Common Mistakes Highlighted in the Episode
  • Assuming all flammable liquids behave the same

  • Treating corrosive chemicals as only a “skin hazard”

  • Ignoring chronic hazards like carcinogens or reproductive toxins

  • Not recognizing that some chemicals fall into multiple hazard classes

  • Relying only on pictograms without reading the SDS

These gaps lead to preventable exposures and incidents.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Chemical classifications are the foundation of effective hazard communication

  • Workers need simple, practical training on what each class means

  • Classifications should guide storage, PPE, ventilation, and emergency planning

  • Labels and SDSs work together — neither is enough on its own

  • Understanding hazard classes helps leaders make better decisions and prevent incidents

The episode’s core message: When you understand a chemical’s classification, you understand its risk — and how to control it.