Are first-aid kits mandatory at workplaces in Myanmar?

Updated May 3, 2026·3 min read
Direct answer

Yes. The Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 makes first-aid kits mandatory at every Myanmar workplace, regardless of size. Larger workplaces, factories, and high-hazard sites must have multiple kits, trained first-aiders, and a documented inventory check cadence. The first-aid kit and its replenishment log are routine items in OSH inspections.

What Myanmar law says

Yes — first-aid kits are mandatory under the Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019. The duty applies to every workplace, regardless of size or sector. Larger sites and high-hazard industries (factories, construction, mining) must have multiple kits placed in accessible locations, trained first-aiders on each shift, and a documented replenishment cadence.

The Factories Act 1951 adds factory-specific provisions on first-aid for higher-risk operations — chemical handling, machine shops, and similar — including pre-shift readiness checks.

First-aid requirements

ElementStandard
First-aid kit on siteMandatory at every workplace
Number of kitsSufficient for headcount and site layout
ContentsBandages, antiseptic, gauze, scissors, eye-wash, gloves, CPR mask, basic medications
Trained first-aidersAt least one per shift in larger workplaces; certified annually
Replenishment logInventory check cadence (typical monthly)
SignageClear pictogram showing kit location
RecordsIssuance log, replenishment log, training certificates
Retention≥ 5 years

Edge cases

  • Multi-floor offices — at least one kit per floor; central kit alone is insufficient.
  • Field / construction — vehicle-mounted kits and portable trauma kits required.
  • Chemical handling — eye-wash and chemical-burn-specific items must be added.
  • Remote locations — emergency-response plan must address evacuation time to nearest hospital.
  • Expired contents — replenishment log must trigger replacement before expiry.
First-aid SOP and replenishment log — free download Localised Myanmar templates covering kit contents checklist, monthly inventory log, and first-aider certification roster.
Download templates →

Records and inspections

The replenishment log, first-aider certificates, and any first-aid incident log must be on file. The OSH inspectorate checks these during inspection, especially expired contents and missing first-aider coverage. Buyer audits in export sectors specifically demand the replenishment log. Retention ≥ 5 years.

Employer takeaway

First-aid kits are mandatory at every Myanmar workplace under the OSH Law 2019. Place enough kits to cover the site, add a trained first-aider per shift in larger operations, run a monthly replenishment check, and signpost kit locations. Keep the replenishment log and first-aider certificates on file for 5 years. Expired contents are a frequent OSH inspection finding.

For HR teams managing factory or multi-site compliance
Stay on the right side of the labour office. QHRM tracks attendance, OT caps, weekly-off, and surfaces compliance flags before the township office does — used by 350+ Myanmar employers.

Common mistakes

  • One central first-aid kit on a multi-floor site — insufficient.
  • Letting bandages, antiseptic, or eye-wash expire without replenishment.
  • Designating first-aiders without certification.
  • No signage indicating kit location.

Related reading: workplace safety law, fire safety drills mandatory, and safety records to maintain.

Sources
  1. Occupational Safety and Health Law 2019 — First-aid and emergency-response provisions
  2. Factories Act 1951 — Factory-specific first-aid overlay
  3. Compliance Calendar — Records and inspection scope

Related questions

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