Ohio new-hire forms
Ohio Vet New-Hire Compliance Forms
Ohio rules that affect staff acknowledgments and training records.
Verified · 2026-07-06Safety-plan acknowledgments
Ohio does not operate an OSHA-approved State Plan. Federal OSHA applies directly to private-sector veterinary employers in Ohio, so the federal baseline in this plan is the operative workplace-safety standard; there is no Ohio OSHA overlay for private employers. 1
Controlled-substance access and records
Ohio requires a terminal distributor license for veterinary clinics that possess controlled substances. Ohio defines "dangerous drug" to include drugs restricted to use by or on the order of a licensed veterinarian, and defines "licensed health professional authorized to prescribe drugs" to include a veterinarian licensed under Chapter 4741. Ohio also defines "terminal distributor of dangerous drugs" to include persons that have possession, custody, or control of dangerous drugs for purposes other than their own use and consumption. 2
Ohio Revised Code 4729.541 exempts licensed prescribers and certain prescriber-owned business entities from terminal-distributor licensure in general, but removes that exemption when the person or entity possesses, has custody or control of, and distributes dangerous drugs that are compounded/used for compounding or Schedule I-V controlled substances. A clinic with controlled substances therefore needs the appropriate Ohio State Board of Pharmacy terminal distributor license; Ohio's license categories define Category III as controlled substances in Schedules I-V. Ohio's veterinary-clinic pharmacy rules define a "veterinary clinic" as a facility licensed as a terminal distributor of dangerous drugs under section 4729.54, with a licensed veterinarian serving as responsible person and drugs possessed on-site for administration or personal furnishing. 3 4 5
Veterinary medical records: at least 3 years after the last visit. Ohio veterinary-board rule 4741-1-21 requires the veterinarian to prepare a written or computer record for examinations, diagnoses, treatments, and surgeries, with minimum content including owner contact information, animal/herd/flock identity, exam/treatment/surgery dates, history, findings, lab/radiographic tests and reports, differential diagnosis, procedures/treatments/results, drugs administered/dispensed/prescribed with dosage and route, surgical procedure details, and anesthesia monitoring. Individual records are required for each patient except livestock or litters may be kept per-client, and medical records including radiographs must be maintained at least 3 years after the last visit. 6
X-ray and sharps handling
Ohio stationary veterinary facilities must have imaging services available on site or by referral, properly identify images with patient name, owner name, and date, and register all radiation sources with and operate them under Ohio Department of Health rules. 7
Ohio's radiation-generating equipment rules define covered equipment as equipment used for dental, veterinary, or medical purposes, excluding therapeutic radiation-generating equipment. A handler must assure the individual responsible for radiation protection is qualified under the listed pathways, which include a registered veterinary technician trained to operate veterinary radiation-generating equipment. Ohio also requires the handler to assure safe operating procedures and equipment standards such as warning labels, technique-factor indications, beam/filtration requirements, stable tube support, and functioning locks/holding devices. 8
Ohio EPA's public FAQ says all veterinary practices are infectious-waste generators and are responsible for handling, packaging, storing, treating, and disposing of infectious wastes under Ohio EPA infectious-waste regulations. Ohio EPA's veterinary infectious-waste guidance says infectious sharps must be placed in a sharps container; it also says veterinarians providing services outside the office, such as farm/racetrack care or vaccination clinics, remain responsible for properly managing infectious waste generated during the visit and taking it back to the office for disposal and quantification when applicable. 9 10
Sources
Verified against primary sources on 2026-07-06. Each entry shows its own check date.
- U.S. Department of Labor / OSHA — OSHA State Plans page, Ohio — State Plans — Ohio. www.osha.gov/stateplans checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Revised Code — ORC 4729.01(F), (I), (Q) — Pharmacists, dangerous drugs definitions. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-revised-code/section-4729.01 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Revised Code — ORC 4729.541(A), (C) — Exemption from licensure as terminal distributor of dangerous drugs. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-revised-code/section-4729.541 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Revised Code — ORC 4729.54(A), (B), (G), (H), (K) — Terminal distributor licenses. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-revised-code/section-4729.54 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Administrative Code — OAC 4729:5-20-01(A) — Veterinary clinics — definitions. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-administrative-code/rule-4729:5-20-01 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Administrative Code — OAC 4741-1-21(A)-(E) — Recordkeeping. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-administrative-code/rule-4741-1-21 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Administrative Code — OAC 4741-1-03(E), (F) — Minimum standards for stationary veterinary facilities. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-administrative-code/rule-4741-1-03 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Administrative Code — OAC 3701:1-66-02 — General administration obligations for medical radiation-generating equipment. codes.ohio.gov/ohio-administrative-code/rule-3701:1-66-02 checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Environmental Protection Agency — Answer ID 131 — Veterinary clinics and infectious waste. ohioepa.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/131/~/veterinary-clinics-and-infectiou... checked 2026-07-06
- Ohio Environmental Protection Agency — Veterinary infectious waste guidance — Infectious Waste Guidance for Veterinarians. dam.assets.ohio.gov/image/upload/epa.ohio.gov/Portals/34/document/guidance/gd_077.p... checked 2026-07-06