Maintaining a safe workplace is everyone’s responsibility. This section offers information and tools to help you manage risks and protect health, safety and wellbeing.
Everything you need to know about worker’s compensation insurance, whether you’re an employer needing to insure your workers or a worker who’s been injured at work.
Your rehabilitation and return to work journey will be easier if you know your options, the steps to take, and who’s responsible for what.
Information about work health and safety and electrical licensing, registration and training.
Learn about the Acts, Regulations and codes of practice we are responsible for and find information on workplace inspections and prosecutions.
Find health and safety information and guidance about your industry and the kind of work you do.
A listing of useful resources available on the website. Use the in-page search or filters to find what you need.
Read the January 2025 edition of eSAFE Rural newsletter.
You may have heard that Workplace Health and Safety Queensland is undertaking an active compliance program to reduce hazards around working near powerlines in the agricultural industry.
Queensland is no stranger to extreme weather events. This is a reminder to primary industry to consider safety when operating plant in wet conditions and the effects of heat stress when working in severe temperatures.
There have been several cases of melioidosis reported in Far North Queensland over the past couple of months following very wet conditions.
Farmers are reminded to establish exclusion zones around mobile plant when operating on farms after a worker sustained fatal crush injuries undertaking fencing activities on a rural property last year.
Queenslanders involved in the state’s primary industries are reminded to keep safety front of mind after a number of serious fatalities last year.
Avian influenza, also known as bird flu, is a virus that affects all kinds of birds from poultry to migratory shorebirds, sea birds and waterfowl. While many strains of avian influenza cause minimal symptoms, others, such as high pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1, can have devastating impacts on bird populations and pose a risk to human health, especially in environments where people work with or are exposed to birds.