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What law applies?

In order to understand the workplace health and safety requirements for manual tasks, and your obligations under the law you must consider and understand relevant legislation and codes of practice.

General health and safety obligations
What you must do
Specific regulations for manual handling

General health and safety obligations

To understand your obligations and safety requirements you must be familiar with the:

Every Queensland employer must have workers' compensation insurance. Most employers insure with WorkCover Queensland, while a small number of large organisations have their own insurance. This insurance coverage ensures that employees injured at work receive financial support.

What you must do

It is a requirement of the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 that risks must be assessed and control measures then implemented and reviewed to prevent or minimise exposure to the risks.

If the regulation describes how to prevent or minimise a risk at your workplace you must do what the regulation says. If there is a code of practice that describes how to prevent or minimise a risk at your workplace you must do what the code says or adopt and follow another way that gives the same level of protection against the risk.

If there is no regulation or code of practice about a risk at your workplace you must choose an appropriate way to manage exposure to the risk. People must, where there is no regulation or code of practice about a risk, take reasonable precautions and exercise proper diligence against the risk.

See the Risk Management Code of Practice 2007 for further information.

Specific regulations for manual handling

There are two Advisory Standards (now known as Codes of Practice) that describe the main health and safety problems linked to manual tasks and gives practical advice on how to address them:

Manual Tasks Advisory Standard 2000 (now known as a Code of Practice)
Manual Tasks Involving the Handling of People Code of Practice 2001