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Join More than 20 Global Health and Safety Organizations Pledging Support to Mitigate Spread of COVID-19 and Other Infectious Diseases

Commit To C.A.R.E. Initiative Urges Employers to Join Efforts to Ensure Safe Communities, Workplaces

Six professional health and safety associations have joined a growing number of employers formally pledging their support to a new nationwide program aimed to keep employees and communities safe from the ongoing threat of COVID-19, flu, and other infectious diseases. Since its launch in 2022, Commit To C.A.R.E. has attracted numerous businesses – as well as public health and occupational health and safety organizations – and provided them with free tools and resources to address these continued public health threats.

The latest employers to sign on as partners to the public education initiative Commit To C.A.R.E. (Community, Awareness, Responsibility, Equity) program include:

  • American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
  • American Society for Safety Professionals (ASSP)
  • Board of Certified Safety Professionals (BCSP)
  • Board of Global EHS Credentialing (BGC) The Center for Construction Research and Training (CPWR)
  • Southern African Institute for Occupational Hygiene (SAIOH)

“We have seen time and time again how corporate America has risen to the challenge during trying times by helping their communities recover from everything from natural disasters to a pandemic,” said AIHA CEO Lawrence Sloan. “This type of leadership speaks volumes about how businesses are committed to ensuring the health and safety of their employees and communities. The Commit To C.A.R.E. program continues to attract corporate and healthcare associations who recognize the value in mitigating the spread of infectious diseases in the workplace and beyond.”

AIHA, the association for scientists and professionals committed to preserving and ensuring occupational and environmental health and safety in the workplace and community, launched the Commit To C.A.R.E. public education initiative in partnership with IBEC, The Integrated Bioscience and Built Environment Consortium. Funded by a cooperative agreement with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)/NIOSH, the Commit To C.A.R.E. initiative recently announced the availability of new free public education resources on its website that include risk assessment tools, indoor air quality tools, and vaccines & testing tools. The CDC awarded AIHA $110,000 to develop these new materials, which offer easily digestible information to help keep workers and the public safe from airborne-transmitted diseases, such as COVID-19, the flu, and measles – diseases that can wreak havoc on normal business operations.

Written in non-technical terms for a lay audience, the program’s comprehensive resources – available in nine different languages – include micro-training videos (i.e., addressing the importance of control strategies such as ventilation and respiratory protection), checklists (including HVAC Optimization, Portable Air Cleaner Optimization, and COVID-19 Vaccination Policy FAQ), and free downloadable fliers and posters outlining simple safety tips on a range of topics specific to various workplace settings such as hospitals, long-term care facilities, and small businesses.

The six new organizations join a long list of partners in the Commit To C.A.R.E. program, including L’Oréal, National Safety Council, LIUNA Training & Education Fund, Household and Commercial Products Association, and Society of Critical Care Medicine, among others. All organizations believe that we all have a responsibility to one another to keep workers safe in any workplace setting.

Organizations interested in becoming a Commit To C.A.R.E. partner do not need to provide financial support to the program, simply their time and influence in sharing these vitally important knowledge products with their members and other appropriate audiences. Potential partners fill out a form on the Commit To C.A.R.E. website once they determine the level of in-kind support their organization will pledge to the effort. The three levels of support include endorse, endorse and share, and endorse, share and lead.

"The science of airborne disease transmission is complex, and these complexities can create some ambiguity about how these diseases can impact the workforce when people are working side-by-side either in a boardroom or an assembly line,” said Kenneth Martinez, Chief Science Officer at IBEC. “If there’s one thing COVID-19 has taught employers it is that the spread of respiratory diseases cannot be underestimated. Employers need to continually assess the health risks posed in their workspaces, and the Commit To C.A.R.E. resources offer a tailored approach to training efforts across a spectrum of industries.”

For more information about becoming a C.A.R.E. Partner, or accessing free multimedia resources such as checklists, posters, flyers, videos and to take the C.A.R.E. pledge, visit: Commit2Care.org.

About AIHA

AIHA is the association for scientists and professionals committed to preserving and ensuring occupational and environmental health and safety in the workplace and community. Founded in 1939, we support our members with our expertise, networks, comprehensive education programs, and other products and services that help them maintain the highest professional and competency standards. More than half of AIHA's nearly 8,500 members are Certified Industrial Hygienists, and many hold other professional designations. AIHA serves as a resource for those employed across the public and private sectors, as well as to the communities in which they work.

In 2020, AIHA developed the “Back to Work Safely” initiative to help small businesses get back to work safely with business sector-specific guidelines and resources. AIHA’s Back to Work Safely Guidelines, 2nd Edition, are available for small to mid-size businesses in 27 sectors. The free guidance documents, available in English and Spanish, provide clear and actionable steps towards the safe operations of a variety of workplaces through prevention, early detection, and control of COVID-19. The 2nd editions offer practical guidance for employers to implement multiple layers of risk mitigation strategies in order of most effective to least effective – through the elimination of a hazard, substitution of a hazard, use of engineering controls (e.g., increased ventilation and air filtration), administrative controls (e.g., staggered shifts), and personal protective equipment (e.g., respirators and gloves). For more information, please visit www.healthierworkplaces.org.

About IBEC

IBEC, the Integrated Bioscience and Built Environment Consortium, strives to bridge the gap between science and real-world applications so that people can feel safe gathering together again in indoor spaces. A membership-based organization founded in March 2020, IBEC brings together scientists, OEHS professionals, disaster response, and healthcare specialists to help accelerate the contributions of science and technology for healthily built environments. For more information, please visit www.weareibec.org.

Contacts

Karen Sideris,

Communication Consultant, CS-Effect

(219) 644-5616 (Central Time)

Susan Marchese, Managing Director,

Strategic Communications and External Affairs, AIHA

(202) 256-8986 (Eastern Time)

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