Business & Operations
Occupational Health and Safety
Helps organisations prevent injuries, manage workplace risk, and keep people safe through systems and compliance.
Short insight
You enjoy work that feels safety, compliance, systems and you can handle the trade-offs that come with it.
- Usually suits people who want desk work.
- The role tends to feel people-heavy across the week.
- This path usually asks for 2 years of study or training.
- One of the real pressures is that it can be the work can feel rule-heavy.
1. What this job is
Helps organisations prevent injuries, manage workplace risk, and keep people safe through systems and compliance.
2. What daily life feels like
Checking safety practices, writing reports, reviewing incidents, running audits, and helping teams strengthen safe systems of work.
3. Why someone might enjoy it
You enjoy work that feels safety, compliance, systems and you can handle the trade-offs that come with it.
- Clear practical value across many industries
- Strong fit for people who care about prevention and systems
- Can open routes into broader risk and compliance work
4. What may be difficult
- The work can feel rule-heavy
- You may need to challenge unsafe behaviour often
- Incident response can be stressful
5. Market reality
A simple picture of what this path tends to feel like in the market: how earnings usually grow, how reachable the path is, and how steady it may feel over time.
Mid: medium
Long-term: medium
6. Paths into the role
Occupational health and safety diploma
Focuses on workplace safety, risk control, compliance, and safe systems of work.
Comfort with compliance, process, and technical site environments helps.
7. Possible support routes
Funding route
NSFAS
Funding support for qualifying students at public universities and TVET colleges.
Coverage: Tuition and selected living costs for eligible learners.
Best for: Public study pathways with household income limits.
Availability depends on the institution and eligibility rules.
Funding route
Employer bursary or internship
Companies sometimes sponsor scarce-skill study or internship entry routes.
Coverage: Varies by employer and can include fees, mentorship, or practical exposure.
Best for: Business, finance, tech, and industrial pathways.
Competition is high and openings are uneven across sectors.
Funding route
Youth employment programme support
Public and non-profit initiatives that help young people access first work exposure.
Coverage: Short-term support, stipends, placement assistance, or training.
Best for: Shorter pathways and first-step job access.
Useful for momentum, but not a full funding solution on its own.
8. Where to study in South Africa
These are official South African directories and provider lists, split into online or distance options and campus or in-person routes.
Campus and in person
Study directory
South African public universities
Official DHET directory of public universities and universities of technology across South Africa.
Study directory
Registered private higher education institutions
Official register of private institutions that are allowed to offer higher education qualifications.
9. Where to ask about funding
These are public or official starting points that line up with this path. Some are broad, some are very specific, and most open and close on their own annual cycles.
Funding contact
NSFAS
The main national public funding route for many students at public universities and TVET colleges.
Funding contact
DHET international scholarships
Official DHET portal for scholarships, exchanges, and study opportunities outside South Africa.
Funding contact
Institution financial aid offices
Many public and private institutions run their own bursaries, merit awards, hardship funds, and payment support offices.
10. Nearby options to compare
11. Official evidence
Occupational health and safety maps strongly to workplace safety management in DHET material, even though the pathway itself can stretch across compliance, incident prevention, and technical site safety roles.