Menu

5 Tips to Fulfill Your Duty of Care

Duty of Care

By: BCD Marketplace Partner – Safeture

Follow these five tips to fulfill your duty of care and become more efficient in your employee risk management.

Duty of care is the ethical and legal obligation of an organization to take reasonable steps to protect the health, safety, and well-being of its employees, customers, and other stakeholders. In the context of travel risk management, duty of care involves identifying potential risks and hazards associated with travel and taking steps to mitigate or eliminate those risks.

Travel risk management is an essential part of any organization’s overall risk management strategy. It involves identifying potential risks associated with travel and implementing measures to minimize or eliminate those risks. This includes identifying potential health and safety hazards, such as infectious diseases, natural disasters, and political instability, and taking steps to protect employees and other stakeholders from those hazards.

Here are five high level tips for organizations to effectively manage travel risk and fulfill their duty of care:

1. Develop a comprehensive travel risk management plan

Organizations should develop a comprehensive travel risk management plan that includes identifying potential risks, implementing measures to mitigate those risks, and regularly reviewing and updating the plan.

2. Communicate with employees

Organizations should communicate with employees about potential travel risks and provide them with information and resources to help them stay safe. This can include providing employees with travel advisories, emergency contact information, and access to medical support services.

3. Provide training 

Organizations should provide employees with training on how to identify potential risks and hazards associated with travel and how to respond to emergency situations. This can include training on how to avoid potential health hazards, such as infectious diseases, and how to respond to natural disasters and other emergencies.

4. Monitor employee health and safety 

Organizations should monitor the health and safety of employees while they are traveling, including providing access to medical support services and conducting regular check-ins to ensure that employees are safe.

5. Review and update policies 

Organizations should regularly review and update their travel risk management policies and procedures to ensure that they are effective and align with the latest best practices. This can include incorporating new technologies and tools to help manage travel risks and continuously improving processes and procedures.

In conclusion, duty of care is an essential part of an organization’s overall risk management strategy, and effective travel risk management is crucial for protecting the health, safety, and well-being of employees and other stakeholders like lone-workers.

Use the 5 above tips as a guide for your duty of care work to succeed in protecting your employees and complying with relevant legislation.

Interested in learning more BCD Travel’s Duty of Care partners? Click Here »

Investing in Your Company’s Physical Risk Resilience

Duty of Care

While cyber incidents are already a top concern for most business leaders, organizations are simultaneously facing a dramatic uptick in physical incidents that have the potential to impact their people and operations.

Read More

Accommodation Safety: The Missing Piece of a Travel Risk Management Plan

Duty of Care

Recent security incidents, travel disruptions, and inflated costs emphasizes the need for organizations to evaluate their Travel Risk Management plans. An integral part of these plans is evaluating accommodation-based risks that may impact your travelers.

Read More

A Preview of the Paris Olympics, Navigating Security Challenges

Duty of Care

A sneak peek into the security landscape ahead of the Olympics, exploring key themes and potential risks that will shape the atmosphere in Paris and the broader Ile-de-France region.

Read More