Occupational Health Testing

DriverCheck’s Occupational Health Testing services, help in identifying potential health risks and hazards in the workplace, as well as ensuring that employees are fit and healthy enough to perform their job duties safely and effectively. Our services help you comply with occupational health and safety legislation or your own employer-specific requirements.

Through DriverCheck’s Physical Abilities Testing, and Medical Surveillance program we can help you comply with Occupational Health and Safety Programs and improve employee safety by ensuring workers are physically and medically fit to work and perform their job-related tasks.

Physical Abilities Testing (PAT)

DriverCheck’s Physical Abilities Testing helps employers ensure their worker’s physical or medical suitability to perform job-related tasks, ensuring that they are fit to work.

Medical Surveillance

Hazardous, toxic, or “designated substances” are those substances or entities considered by provincial and/or federal legislation to be harmful to human health. Medical surveillance programs are proactive exposure-specific initiatives that monitor the effectiveness of workplace safety precautions over time. DriverCheck’s medical surveillance programs help ensure you meet regulatory requirements while protecting the health of their workforce through baseline and periodic testing.

Respiratory Surveillance

Respiratory surveillance is the ongoing monitoring of occupation-related lung disease related to workplace exposures such as asbestos, silica, coal dust, and chemicals including isocyanates. DriverCheck offers the following services as part of a respiratory surveillance program.

Hearing Surveillance

DriverCheck’s Hearing Surveillance Programs help you comply with Occupational Health & Safety regulations related to noise hazards in the workplace. DriverCheck offers the following services as part of a Hearing Surveillance program.

Biological Monitoring

Biological monitoring is the measurement of a chemical or its metabolites in a biological sample (usually the media is urine or blood) against reference values to indicate how much chemical has entered the body by all routes of exposure.

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