The NEBOSH International General Certificate in Occupational Health and Safety (IGC) is a globally recognized qualification designed to teach essential skills for managing workplace risks effectively. Developed with input from NEBOSH and 3,000 leading organizations, it reflects the latest syllabus and best practices. The course is based on international standards, including those from the International Labour Organization (ILO), ensuring its relevance across industries and countries. It equips professionals to confidently identify and manage everyday occupational health and safety challenges.
Justify the need for health and safety improvements
Advice on duties for health and safety in the workplace
Help your organization to manage contractors
Work within a health and safety management system
Positively influence health and safety culture and behavior
Carry out a general risk assessment (using a 5-step approach) of your workplace
Recognize workplace changes and their impacts and understand how to minimize these impacts
Develop basic safe systems of work that include emergency arrangements and know when to use a permit-to-work system
Take part in incident investigations
Help your employer check the effectiveness of their health and safety management system through monitoring, auditing, and review.
Health and Safety Officers
General Managers and Supervisors
HR Managers
Directors
Security workers
Public Service workers
Day 1:
Element 1: Why we should manage workplace health and safety
1.1 Morals and money
1.2 Regulating health and safety
1.3 Who does what in organizations
Element 2: How health and safety management systems work and what they look like
2.1 What they are and the benefits they bring
2.2 What good health and safety management systems look like
Day 2:
Element 3: Managing risk – understanding people and processes
3.1 Health and safety culture
3.2 Improving health and safety culture
3.3 How human factors influence behavior
3.4 Assessing risk
3.5 Management of change
3.6 Safe systems of work
3.7 Permit-to-work systems
3.8 Emergency procedures
Element 4: Health and safety monitoring and measuring
4.1 Active and reactive monitoring
4.2 Investigating incidents
4.3 Health and safety auditing
4.4 Review of health and safety performance
Day 3:
Element 5: Physical and psychological health
5.1 Noise
5.2 Vibration
5.3 Radiation
5.4 Mental ill-health
5.5 Violence at work
5.6 Substance abuse at work
Element 6: Musculoskeletal health
6.1 Work-related upper limb disorders
6.2 Manual handling
6.3 Load-handling equipment
Day 4:
Element 7: Chemical and biological agents
7.1 Hazardous substances
7.2 Assessment of health risks
7.4 Control measures
7.5 Specific agents
Element 8: General workplace issues
8.1 Health, welfare and work environment
8.2 Working at height
8.3 Safe working in confined spaces
8.4 Lone working
8.5 Slips and trips
8.6 Safe movement of people and vehicles
8.7 Work-related driving
Day 5:
Element 9: Work equipment
9.1 General requirements
9.2 Hand-held tools
9.3 Machinery hazards
9.4 Control measures for machinery
Element 10: Fire
10.1 Fire principles
10.2 Preventing fire and fire spread
10.3 Fire alarms and fire-fighting
10.4 Fire evacuation
Element 11: Electricity
11.1 Hazards and risks
11.2 Control measures