NAMES AND SURNAME
STUDENT NO:0000000
MNO3706
ASSIGNMENT 01
QUESTION 01
categories of uninsured costs
• Class 1 accidents: lost workdays, permanent partial disabilities and temporary
total disabilities.
• Class 2 accidents: treatment by a physician outside the company’s facility
• Class 3 accidents: locally provided first aid, property damage of less than
R1600 or the loss of less than eight hours of work time.
• Class 4 accidents: injuries that are so minor that they do not require the
attention of a physician, result in property damage of R1600 or more or cause
eight or more hours to be lost.
QUESTION 2
• Apply the guidelines: In this step, as a health and safety practitioner, you
should apply as many of the tests discussed earlier (under 6.3 of this guide)
as necessary to determine the ethically correct decision. In applying these
guidelines, attempt to block out all mitigating circumstances and other factors
that tend to cloud the issue. At this point, the goal is only to identify the ethical
choice. Deciding whether to implement the ethical choice comes in the next
step.
• Select the approach: When deciding how to proceed after step 1, you have
three basic approaches. These approaches, as set forth under 6.4 of this
guide, are the best-ratio, blackand- white and full-potential approaches. These
approaches and their ramifications can be debated ad infinitum. However,
selecting an approach to ethical questions is a matter of personal choice.
STUDENT NO:0000000
MNO3706
ASSIGNMENT 01
QUESTION 01
categories of uninsured costs
• Class 1 accidents: lost workdays, permanent partial disabilities and temporary
total disabilities.
• Class 2 accidents: treatment by a physician outside the company’s facility
• Class 3 accidents: locally provided first aid, property damage of less than
R1600 or the loss of less than eight hours of work time.
• Class 4 accidents: injuries that are so minor that they do not require the
attention of a physician, result in property damage of R1600 or more or cause
eight or more hours to be lost.
QUESTION 2
• Apply the guidelines: In this step, as a health and safety practitioner, you
should apply as many of the tests discussed earlier (under 6.3 of this guide)
as necessary to determine the ethically correct decision. In applying these
guidelines, attempt to block out all mitigating circumstances and other factors
that tend to cloud the issue. At this point, the goal is only to identify the ethical
choice. Deciding whether to implement the ethical choice comes in the next
step.
• Select the approach: When deciding how to proceed after step 1, you have
three basic approaches. These approaches, as set forth under 6.4 of this
guide, are the best-ratio, blackand- white and full-potential approaches. These
approaches and their ramifications can be debated ad infinitum. However,
selecting an approach to ethical questions is a matter of personal choice.