Recall common types of injuries to hands, wrists and fingers;
Recognize hazards to hands, wrists and fingers;
Recall how to avoid injuring hands, wrists and fingers;
Know what factors to consider when wearing gloves
Enjoying your hobbies. Checking your phone. Getting ready in the morning. Your hands help you do a remarkable variety of tasks. Throughout the workday, your hands can encounter any number of hazards. Fortunately, many hand and wrist injuries are preventable. This course will present potential hand, wrist and finger hazards, as well as the steps to take to avoid them. Ideal learners include all employees.
OSHA 29 CFR 1910 Subpart P - Hand and Portable Powered Tools and Other Hand-Held Equipment;
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.138 - Hand Protection;
OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart I - Tools-Hand and Power;
OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart E - Personal Protective and Life Saving Equipment
Your hands are your most valuable tools, but they face risks every day at work. Each year, 1 million workers are treated in emergency rooms for hand injuries, and 110,000 cases result in lost work time. Studies show that 70% of these injuries happen when workers aren’t wearing gloves, and 30% involve gloves that are damaged or inappropriate for the task.
Our Hand Safety Training gives you the practical skills you need to protect your hands in the workplace. You’ll learn how to identify common hazards, select the right gloves, and use protective strategies that help prevent injuries. This course is designed to help you work more safely, reduce your risk of injury, and support a stronger, safer workplace. Enroll today and gain the confidence and knowledge to keep your hands safe every day.
Our hand safety training includes interactive online modules covering essential protective measures and risk management strategies. Each unit combines real-world scenarios with practical techniques to keep your hands safe in any work environment.
Explore the complex structure of hands and how injuries happen. Learn about the most frequent types of hand trauma, including cuts, burns, fractures, repetitive strain injuries, and how these injuries impact both work and personal life.
Learn to spot hazards such as sharp materials, pinch points, rotating equipment and chemical exposure, before they cause injuries. This unit trains you to evaluate tasks step-by-step and take immediate preventive action using both awareness and appropriate safety tools.
Master practical prevention techniques that work. Discover proper tool handling methods, safe machine operation procedures, and ergonomic best practices that dramatically reduce injury risk while maintaining productivity.
Choose the right glove for every task. Learn to choose from different glove materials to protect against specific hazards, proper fitting techniques, and maintenance protocols to maximize protection without sacrificing dexterity or comfort.
Act quickly when accidents happen. This unit covers essential first aid techniques for common hand injuries, when to seek medical attention, and how to properly document incidents to prevent future occurrences.
Create a culture of safety in your workplace. Learn how to establish effective hand safety protocols, conduct safety meetings, and motivate compliance through positive reinforcement and clear communication.
Protecting your hands means protecting your livelihood and quality of life. Proper hand safety training delivers advantages that extend far beyond the workplace. Discover how this essential knowledge creates lasting value:
Your hands are essential for work and everyday tasks. With proper training, you'll develop habits that protect you from debilitating injuries that could sideline your career or impact your ability to perform daily activities. Don't risk your livelihood – arm yourself with prevention knowledge.
Safe workers are productive workers. By learning to identify and mitigate hand hazards, you'll help reduce workplace accidents that lead to downtime, project delays, and increased costs. Companies with strong safety programs consistently outperform those with poor safety records.
Understand the regulations that protect workers. This training helps you navigate OSHA requirements for hand safety, reducing the risk of citations and fines while creating a legally compliant workplace that protects employees and the company.
Hand safety principles apply across industries. Whether you work in construction, manufacturing, healthcare, or office environments, the protective techniques you'll learn transfer to any workplace setting, making you a more valuable employee throughout your career.
At LearnTastic, we deliver expert-led, engaging safety training that sticks with learners long after completion. Our hand safety course stands apart from other safety trainings due to the following reasons:
Our hand safety training is accepted by 98% of employers nationwide. It will boost your credentials and demonstrate your commitment to workplace safety standards.
Get 0.03 CE credits as you develop essential safety skills. These credits help you maintain your certifications active and support your career growth.
Our course follows the latest OSHA guidelines and top industry practices. These include selecting the right cut-resistant gloves, implementing safe tool-handling techniques, and applying proper lifting and gripping mechanics to avoid strain and injury.
Complete your training anywhere, anytime with our responsive platform that works across all devices. Learn at your convenience without disrupting your work schedule.
Our content is created by Certified Safety Professionals (CSP) and Occupational Health and Safety Technicians (OHST) with real-world experience, delivering practical knowledge that addresses actual workplace challenges rather than theoretical concepts.
Join over 1,900 satisfied learners who rate our hand safety training 5 stars for its effectiveness in reducing workplace injuries and improving safety awareness.
If your job depends on manual work, protecting yourself should never be an afterthought. This course is meant for people who are exposed to cuts, burns, crush injuries, or repetitive strains, which are the real risks. Join hundreds of other learners if you are:
Construction workers and tradespeople
Manufacturing and assembly line employees
Warehouse and logistics personnel
Maintenance and repair technicians
Healthcare workers
Laboratory technicians
Food service and hospitality staff
Automotive service professionals
Office workers (for ergonomic hand protection)
Safety managers and supervisors
Our hand safety training meets all relevant regulatory standards, ensuring you receive compliant training recognized across industries.
OSHA 29 CFR 1910 Subpart P - Hand and Portable Powered Tools and Other Hand-Held Equipment
OSHA 29 CFR 1910.138 - Hand Protection
OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart I - Tools- Hand and Power
OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart E - Personal Protective and Life Saving Equipment
UL certification Marks serve as a recognized symbol of trust in our customers’ products.
Equip industrial employees with knowledge on preventing musculoskeletal injuries through ergonomic practices and awareness training.
Equip yourself to assess scenes and victims effectively for precise first-aid responses. Ideal for trained employees.
Real stories. Real results. Here's how professionals across industries are growing with LearnTastic.
What are the basic rules for hand safety?
Keep your hands away from moving machinery parts. Use the right tool for each job. Wear appropriate gloves for specific hazards. Maintain awareness of pinch points. Remove jewelry and loose clothing before operating equipment. Follow lockout/tagout procedures when servicing machines.
What does OSHA say about hand safety?
OSHA requires employers to provide hand protection when workers face hazards from chemicals, cuts, burns, or extreme temperatures. The regulations mandate proper glove selection based on specific workplace dangers and hand safety training on protective equipment use.
How to improve hand safety in the workplace?
Start by conducting thorough hand-specific hazard assessments to identify pinch points, sharp edges, or vibration risks. Then, reduce or eliminate dangers at the source with engineering controls like machine guards, anti-vibration tools, or automatic shutoffs. Enforce safety procedures consistently. Encourage reporting of near-misses and hazardous conditions.
What is the best way to heal from a hand injury?
Follow medical advice precisely. Rest the injured area and avoid activities that cause pain. Apply ice to reduce swelling in the first 48 hours. Elevate the hand above heart level when possible. Complete prescribed physical therapy exercises to restore strength and mobility.