Certified Safety Training
Certified Safety Data Sheets Library for Deathcare Professionals
Certified Safety Data Sheets Library for Deathcare Professionals
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Easy, Affordable, Updated Instantly.
"Certified Safety Training offered us Certified Safety Data Sheets, and we jumped at the opportunity. We were excited to move into the 21st century and eliminate our old bulky MSDS and SDS folders. We would recommend this to any funeral home looking to stay in compliance, eliminate paper, and operate more efficiently!" - John J. Arena, III
Full electronic SDS management, including:
- Certified Safety Data Sheets from Certified Safety Professionals
- Online access with no login requirements
- Custom QR code
- Custom printable poster
- Real-time database updates
- Unlimited SDS Storage
- SDS Search, View and Print Online and on Mobile by Everyone Onsite
- Unlimited Access to Chemical Safety Global SDS Library
- Responsive Design and Mobile Ready
- Unlimited SDS Updates per Month (add a new SDS, update an existing SDS revision date, or index SDS GHS information)
Annual SDS Management for the U.S. and Canada:
U.S.: The Hazard Communication Standard (HCS) (29 CFR 1910.1200(g)), revised in 2012, requires a Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) (formerly MSDSs or Material Safety Data Sheets) for each hazardous chemical and to communicate information on these hazards. The information contained in the SDS is largely the same as the MSDS, except now the SDSs are required to be presented in a consistent user-friendly, 16-section format (see tab 2). We file SDSs by name of manufacturer, in alphabetical order, e.g., if we use “Clorox” we would file the SDS at the tab labeled “C”.
Canada: In 2015, Canada’s requirements for the hazard classification and communication for workplace chemicals (Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System or WHMIS) were updated to incorporate the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS). These requirements are now known as WHMIS 2015. After a transition period from WHMIS 1988 that ended on December 1, 2018, all workplace chemicals must now meet the hazard classification and communication requirements established by WHMIS 2015.