Plans
to remove the requirement for first aid training providers to be approved by
the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) have gone out to consultation. The
proposal to amend the Health and Safety (First-Aid) Regulations (1981) was made
in the independent Löfstedt report into health and safety, and accepted by the
Government. HSE is now seeking views in a six week consultation and its Board
will make a recommendation to ministers about how to proceed after considering
the responses.
Views
are also being sought on whether the Approved Code of Practice (ACoP) is useful
and provides practical advice on how to comply with the law. HSE is also
proposing revised guidance for employers to help them ensure they adopt
proportionate first aid arrangements suitable to their workplace. Andy McGrory,
HSE's consultation manager, said: "We believe this amendment to the First
Aid Regulations will give businesses greater flexibility in choosing training
and providers that are suitable for their workplace. HSE will continue to set
the standards for existing training - the one day Emergency First Aid at Work
(EFAW) and three day First Aid at Work (FAW) courses - which will continue to
be the building blocks in all cases where a first aid needs assessment shows
that training is necessary."
Employers
will still have to ensure that they have an adequate number of trained first
aiders as identified in their needs assessment. The earliest the law could
change is April 2013, with new guidance published in the new year and the
amended Regulations coming in to force in April 2013.
Details of the consultation, and how to respond, are
available at http://www.hse.gov.uk/consult/condocs/cd248.htm
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