Formaldehyde Safety Course Overview
Formaldehyde is one of the most widely used industrial chemicals in the world, with over four million workers potentially exposed. In healthcare settings, formaldehyde serves as a critical disinfectant, tissue preservative, and sterilant. Pathology labs use it to preserve specimens. Dialysis units use it in reprocessing. Mortuaries depend on it for embalming. Yet this colorless, pungent gas poses serious health risks—from acute irritation to chronic effects including cancer.
The challenge is that formaldehyde is both essential and hazardous. Workers must use it, but exposure must be minimized. Many healthcare employees don’t fully understand the routes of exposure, recognize early symptoms of overexposure, or know the engineering controls and work practices that prevent harmful exposure. Without proper training, workers may unknowingly exceed permissible exposure limits, fail to use required PPE correctly, or respond inappropriately to spills and exposure incidents.
This comprehensive training course prepares healthcare workers to use formaldehyde safely. Employees learn common uses of formaldehyde in healthcare settings, routes of exposure (inhalation, skin contact, ingestion), acute and chronic health effects including cancer risk, OSHA permissible exposure limits and action levels, when medical surveillance is required, proper response to exposure incidents and spills, and engineering controls, work practices, and PPE that minimize exposure. The goal is protecting worker health while enabling the safe use of this necessary but hazardous chemical.


