Heat Stress Basics
Hazard Communication
Chemical Labels & SDS
Chemical Storage
Spill Response
100

This environmental factor, along with humidity and air velocity, contributes to heat stress.

Temperature

100

This ____ standard gives employees the “right to know” about hazardous chemicals.

NFPA

EPA

OSHA

NIOSH

OSHA

100

This identifies the chemical on a label (name, code, or batch number).

Product Identifier 

100

Chemicals should be stored by this, not alphabetically.

Hazard Class

100

This is the first step in spill response—stop the source.

Control

200

This term describes the body adapting to heat over 1–2 weeks.

Acclimatization

200

These documents provide detailed information about chemical hazards and safe handling.

Safety Data Sheet

200

There are this many sections in a standard SDS.

16

200

These two should never be stored together due to toxic gas risk.

Acids and Cyanides

200

This step prevents the spill from spreading.

Contain

300

This is also known as “prickly heat.”

Heat Rash

300

These standardized symbols alert workers to chemical hazards.

Pictograms

300

These describe the nature of a chemical’s hazard (e.g., “toxic if inhaled”).

Hazard Statements

300

This type of cabinet is required for storing flammable liquids.

Flammable Cabinet

300

These kits include absorbent pads, PPE, and disposal bags.

Spill Kits

400

This condition occurs when sweating stops and is a medical emergency.

Heat Stroke

400

This signal word is used for the most severe hazards.

Danger

400

This label component explains how to minimize risks during handling or storage.

Precautionary Statement

400

These chemicals must be kept away from flammables because they increase combustion.

Oxidizers 

400

These agencies enforce spill-related environmental and safety regulations.

OSHA and EPA

500

This recommended hydration practice includes one small cup every 15–20 minutes.


Drinking water frequently (hydration)

500

This must be updated within 6 months when new hazard information is available.

GHS Labels

500

These three hazard categories include physical, health, and this third type.

Environmental Hazard

500

This rule states incompatible chemicals must not be stored together.

Chemical Segregation (Compatibility Rule)

500

This critical action in spill response ensures the incident is reported to the proper personnel or agencies after cleanup.

Communicate (Report the incident)

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