South Carolina Code of Regulations
Chapter 71 - DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, LICENSING AND REGULATION-DIVISION OF LABOR
Article 1 - OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REGULATIONS
Subarticle 3 - RECORDING AND REPORTING OCCUPATIONAL INJURIES AND ILLNESSES
Subpart C - Recording Criteria
Section 71-306 - Determination of new cases
Universal Citation: SC Code Regs 71-306
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(a) Basic requirement. You must consider an injury or illness to be a "new case" if:
(1) The employee has not previously
experienced a recorded injury or illness of the same type that affects the same
part of the body, or
(2) The
employee previously experienced a recorded injury or illness of the same type
that affected the same part of the body but had recovered completely (all signs
and symptoms had disappeared) from the previous injury or illness and an event
or exposure in the work environment caused the signs or symptoms to
reappear.
(b) Implementation.
(1) When an employee
experiences the signs or symptoms of a chronic work-related illness, do I need
to consider each recurrence of signs or symptoms to be a new case? No, for
occupational illnesses where the signs or symptoms may recur or continue in the
absence of an exposure in the workplace, the case must only be recorded once.
Examples may include occupational cancer, asbestosis, byssinosis and
silicosis.
(2) When an employee
experiences the signs or symptoms of an injury or illness as a result of an
event or exposure in the workplace, such as an episode of occupational asthma,
must I treat the episode as a new case? Yes, because the episode or recurrence
was caused by an event or exposure in the workplace, the incident must be
treated as a new case.
(3) May I
rely on a physician or other licensed health care professional to determine
whether a case is a new case or a recurrence of an old case? You are not
required to seek the advice of a physician or other licensed health care
professional. However, if you do seek such advice, you must follow the
physician or other licensed health care professional's recommendation about
whether the case is a new case or a recurrence. If you receive recommendations
from two or more physicians or other licensed health care professionals, you
must make a decision as to which recommendation is the most authoritative (best
documented, best reasoned, or most authoritative), and record the case based
upon that recommendation.
(Cross Reference: 1904.6)
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