$86,000–$99,000/year
$40–$48/hour
Associate (ADN) or Bachelor's degree (BSN)
5% (2024–2034)
Faster than average — BLS August 2025
No
Corporations, manufacturing plants, construction sites,
May 2026
What Is an Occupational Health Nurse?
An occupational health nurse is a registered nurse who works for a company, not a hospital.
That company might be an Amazon fulfilment centre, a Boeing plant, a Google campus, or a government agency.
Wherever you have large numbers of people working, especially in environments with physical risk, there’s usually an OHN somewhere in the building.
What the job actually involves is broader than most people expect. Yes, you treat injuries. A laceration, a back strain, a chemical splash. But that’s maybe a third of what fills a typical week.
The rest is prevention work, building health surveillance programs, keeping the company on the right side of OSHA, managing workers’ compensation cases, running wellness initiatives, and being the person who has a defibrillator ready and knows how to use it when someone goes down on the warehouse floor.
Core responsibilities:
- Treating workplace injuries and illnesses on-site
- Workers’ compensation management from incident to return-to-work
- Health screenings: pre-employment physicals, audiometric testing, drug screening
- Wellness and safety program development
- OSHA log maintenance and regulatory compliance
- Chronic disease support for employees
The thing that takes some adjustment, especially if you’re coming from a hospital, is that the work is almost entirely preventive.
In a ward, you react. Someone arrives sick or injured, and you manage what’s already happened.
In occupational health, your whole purpose is to stop that from happening. For some nurses, that mindset shift is genuinely energising. For others, it takes getting used to.
Worth noting too: this sits among the more sustainable nursing careers long-term.
The hours are predictable, the physical toll is lower, and you’re not rotating through nights every third week.
Why Become an Occupational Health Nurse?
Excellent Work-Life Balance:
OHNs typically work Monday-Friday daytime schedules (often 8am-5pm) with no nights, weekends, or holidays. This predictability appeals to nurses seeking family-friendly schedules or those burnt out from hospital shift work.
Autonomy and Independence:
Many OHNs work alone or in small teams as the sole healthcare provider at their worksite. This independence requires strong clinical judgment but provides autonomy many bedside nurses lack. OHNs make decisions, develop programs, and shape workplace health culture with minimal direct supervision.
Preventive Focus:
Rather than treating sick patients, OHNs prevent injuries and illnesses through education, safety programs, and early intervention. This proactive approach offers satisfaction from keeping people healthy rather than only responding to crises.
Diverse Work Environments:
OHNs work across industries - manufacturing, technology companies, construction, aviation, government agencies, universities, healthcare systems. This variety allows finding settings matching personal interests.
Reduced Physical Demands:
Occupational health nursing is significantly less physically demanding than hospital nursing. No patient lifting, prolonged standing, or rushing between emergencies. This sustainability appeals to nurses with physical limitations or seeking less strenuous work as they age.
Competitive Compensation:
OHNs earn $86,000–$99,000 on average in 2026 (Glassdoor: $98,996 from 503 reports; PayScale: $86,131 from 259 profiles). Comparable to hospital nursing with a significantly better schedule and lower physical demand.
Professional Growth Opportunities:
OHNs can pursue certification (COHN, COHN-S), specialize in areas like ergonomics or case management, or advance to occupational health leadership roles managing corporate wellness programs.
Occupational health nursing combines clinical nursing with public health, safety science, and business, creating unique careers focused on worker well-being.
Day in the Life: Responsibilities and Tasks
Occupational health nurses’ duties vary significantly by industry. Before the full breakdown, here is what a real working day looks like across two very different settings, because understanding the feel of the job matters as much as knowing the task list.
At a Manufacturing Plant
6:45 am, four hundred workers are coming on shift, and you’re the only healthcare provider on site. You start with overnight incident reports; a missed note from the previous shift can turn into an OSHA recordable you didn’t see coming.
First patient just after 8 am. Press operator, laceration from yesterday. You assess it, treat it on site, write up the OSHA documentation, and coordinate modified duty with his supervisor. That conversation, somewhere between clinical and operational, is one you’ll have multiple times a week.
Pre-employment physicals for two new hires eat up mid-morning. Audiometric testing for workers in the noisiest part of the floor follows. Just before lunch, a near-miss with a forklift pulls you out for a walk-through, photos, an incident report, and a safety team call. You’re out at 3:30 pm. Varied, genuinely clinical, and mostly solo.
At a Tech Company Campus
You share the clinic with one other OHN and a part-time PA. The morning is ergonomic consults wrist pain, neck issues, and monitors that are badly positioned for years—six appointments before 11 am.
A quarterly wellness presentation to a software engineering team follows. After lunch, a return-to-work plan for someone three weeks out from shoulder surgery, coordinating the physio, the line manager, and HR simultaneously. The afternoon goes to an annual health risk assessment report for the benefits committee. You’re out by five.
No nights. No weekends. After years of rotating rosters, that takes a while to feel normal.
Injury and Illness Management
Immediate Care for Workplace Injuries
OHNs provide first aid and emergency care for workplace injuries – cuts, burns, fractures, chemical exposures, eye injuries. They assess injury severity, provide initial treatment, determine if outside medical care is needed, arrange transportation to emergency departments when necessary, and document incidents thoroughly for workers’ compensation and OSHA reporting.
Case Management and Follow-Up
After injuries, OHNs coordinate care including scheduling follow-up appointments with physicians, communicating with healthcare providers about work restrictions, managing modified duty assignments allowing injured workers to return to work with limitations, monitoring healing progress, and facilitating full duty return when medically cleared.
Workers' Compensation Coordination
OHNs manage workers’ compensation claims by documenting injuries accurately, filing required paperwork, serving as liaison between injured employees and insurance carriers, tracking claim status, and ensuring employees receive appropriate benefits and medical care.
Health Surveillance and Screening Programs
Pre-Employment and Periodic Health Screenings
OHNs conduct health assessments including pre-placement physical exams ensuring candidates can safely perform job requirements, periodic health monitoring for employees in high-risk roles (e.g., annual exams for workers exposed to hazardous materials), drug and alcohol screening, and fitness-for-duty evaluations after illness or injury.
Regulatory Compliance Monitoring
Many industries require specific health surveillance programs. OHNs implement and manage:
- Hearing conservation programs (audiometric testing for noise-exposed workers)
- Respiratory protection programs (fit-testing, spirometry)
- Hazardous material exposure monitoring (bloodwork, biomonitoring)
- Vision screening programs
- Tuberculosis screening (healthcare, correctional facilities)
Health Promotion and Wellness Programs
Disease Prevention and Health Education
OHNs develop and deliver health education programs addressing workplace-relevant topics: ergonomics and proper lifting techniques, stress management, smoking cessation, nutrition and weight management, chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension), immunization campaigns (flu shots, COVID-19 vaccines), and health screenings (blood pressure, cholesterol, glucose).
Wellness Program Development and Coordination
Many companies task OHNs with designing and implementing comprehensive wellness programs including health risk assessments, biometric screenings, fitness challenges, healthy eating initiatives, mental health resources, and incentive programs encouraging healthy behaviors.
Safety Program Development and Implementation
Hazard Assessment and Risk Reduction
OHNs participate in workplace safety initiatives by conducting worksite walk-throughs identifying health and safety hazards, collaborating with safety officers and industrial hygienists on risk mitigation, developing emergency response plans, and reviewing injury trends to identify prevention opportunities.
Ergonomic Assessments
OHNs evaluate workstations for ergonomic risks causing musculoskeletal disorders. They conduct ergonomic assessments, recommend workstation modifications (adjustable chairs, proper monitor height, anti-fatigue mats), educate employees on proper body mechanics, and track effectiveness of ergonomic interventions in reducing repetitive strain injuries.
Emergency Preparedness and Response
OHNs prepare for workplace emergencies by maintaining emergency medical equipment and supplies, developing emergency response protocols, training employees in CPR and first aid, coordinating emergency drills, and responding to medical emergencies (cardiac arrests, strokes, severe allergic reactions).
Regulatory Compliance and Documentation
OSHA Compliance
OHNs ensure compliance with Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) regulations including maintaining OSHA 300 logs (recording work-related injuries and illnesses), filing OSHA 300A annual summaries, ensuring proper posting of required notices, and preparing for OSHA inspections.
Record Keeping and Data Analysis
OHNs maintain detailed medical records complying with privacy regulations (HIPAA), track injury and illness rates, analyze trends identifying workplace hazards or patterns, and generate reports for management demonstrating health program effectiveness and return on investment.
Chronic Disease Management and Counseling
Individual Employee Counseling
Employees often consult OHNs about health concerns, medications, chronic disease management, and personal health issues. OHNs provide education, counseling, referrals to appropriate healthcare providers, and support for employees managing conditions like diabetes, hypertension, or mental health concerns.
Return-to-Work Coordination
When employees miss extended work due to illness or surgery, OHNs facilitate return-to-work by communicating with treating physicians about job requirements, coordinating accommodations under Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), developing graduated return-to-work plans, and monitoring employee adjustment.
What’s Next?
Work Environment
This section covers hospitals, specialty clinics, academic environments, and leadership roles—helping you visualize your future workplace.
Work Environment
Where Occupational Health Nurses Work and What to Expect
Occupational health nurses practice across diverse industries, each offering distinct work conditions and challenges.
Primary Work Settings:
-
Large Corporations and Tech Companies: Companies like Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Boeing employ OHNs in corporate health centers or on-site clinics. Modern, well-equipped facilities. Focus on wellness, ergonomics, chronic disease management more than acute injuries. Excellent benefits and compensation.
-
Manufacturing and Industrial Plants: Factories, refineries, chemical plants, automotive manufacturing facilities employ OHNs. Higher injury rates requiring strong emergency skills. Exposure to industrial environments (noise, chemicals, heavy machinery). Often solo practitioners requiring independence and resourcefulness.
-
Construction Sites: OHNs provide health services at large construction projects (infrastructure, commercial buildings). Temporary on-site clinics. Focus on traumatic injuries, heat illness, substance abuse screening. May rotate between multiple job sites.
-
Healthcare Systems (Employee Health Departments): Hospitals employ OHNs managing employee health - immunizations, tuberculosis surveillance, occupational exposures, injury management, return-to-work. Familiar healthcare environment but focus on employees rather than patients.
-
Government Agencies: Federal, state, local government employ OHNs. OSHA compliance emphasis. Stable employment, good benefits, pension plans.
-
Universities and Schools: Larger educational institutions employ OHNs for faculty and staff health services (separate from student health).
-
Consulting Firms: Experienced OHNs work as consultants helping multiple companies develop occupational health programs, conduct assessments, or provide temporary coverage.
Typical Work Schedule
-
Standard Business Hours: The most attractive feature of occupational health nursing is the schedule. Most OHNs work Monday-Friday, 8am-5pm or similar daytime hours matching company operations. No nights, weekends, or holidays (except some industrial operations running 24/7 where OHNs might rotate shifts).
-
Some Flexibility: Many corporate positions offer flexibility for medical appointments, family obligations. Some OHNs work 4-10 hour shifts (four days weekly).
-
On-Call (Rare): Most OHNs are not on-call. Some industrial settings require phone availability for emergencies, but actual after-hours calls are infrequent.
Physical and Mental Demands
-
Physical Demands: Significantly lower than hospital nursing. Minimal patient lifting (most employees ambulatory). Walking worksite assessments. Prolonged sitting doing documentation and program development. Generally sustainable long-term with low injury risk.
-
Mental Demands: Requires autonomous decision-making (often the only healthcare provider on-site), managing multiple priorities simultaneously (wellness program planning while handling urgent injuries), staying current with occupational health regulations, and balancing employee advocacy with business/management objectives.
-
Emotional Demands: Lower emotional intensity than hospital nursing. Occasional serious injuries or employee deaths but generally less trauma exposure. Stress from managing conflicting priorities or difficult employee/management dynamics.
Pros
-
Schedule: Monday–Friday, standard hours. Even 24/7 industrial sites use structured shifts not unpredictable call-ins
-
Autonomy and independence: Your clinical calls, your program. No charge nurse second-guessing you
-
Preventive work:Stopping problems before they start, not just managing them after
-
Pay relative to lifestyle: Hospital-comparable salary with significantly less physical and emotional load
-
Physical sustainability: Minimal lifting. OHNs work into their 50s and 60s routinely
-
Industry range: Tech, aviation, oil and gas, government you have real options
Cons
-
Isolation: Solo sites mean no colleague down the hall when you're uncertain
-
Clinical pace: Slower than a hospital. ICU nurses sometimes miss the intensity
-
Corporate pressures: You work for the company. Employee advocacy and management priorities don't always point the same direction
-
Physical environment: Industrial OHN roles carry real exposure to noise, chemicals, and site hazards
-
Advancement: Fewer rungs than a large hospital system
-
Slower clinical skill development: Acute care skills like advanced assessment and emergency response develop more slowly outside a hospital setting. A deliberate plan to keep them sharp is worth building from day one.
What’s Next?
Salary & Job Outlook
Learn about average salaries, factors that influence compensation, and projected demand for Clinical Nurse Specialists.
Salary & Job Outlook
Occupational Health Nurse Salary in 2026
Occupational health nurses earn competitive salaries comparable to hospital RNs, with a significantly better schedule attached.
The figures below reflect four data sources collected in 2025–2026: Glassdoor ($98,996 average, 503 reports, January 2026), ZipRecruiter ($86,380, January 2026), PayScale ($86,131, 259 profiles, December 2025), and BLS OEWS national RN mean ($98,430, May 2024).
A realistic planning range for most OHN roles: $86,000–$99,000 nationally.
Median Annual Salary:
$86,000–$99,000
Hourly Wage:
$40–$48
Entry-Level (New to Occupational Health):
$70,000-$78,000
Experienced (75th percentile):
$92,000–$110,000
Top Earners (90th percentile):
$108,000-$125,000+
Salaries vary by industry, company size, geographic location, education, and certification status.
Salary by Experience Level
Experience
Average Salary
Career Stage
New to OHN (0-2 years)
$70,000-$78,000
Transitioning from clinical nursing, learning specialty
Early career (3-5 years)
$78,000-$88,000
Building OHN expertise, possibly pursuing certification
Mid-career (6-10 years)
$85,000-$98,000
Confident practitioner, program development skills
Senior / COHN-S (11-15 years)
$92,000-$108,000
Expert, possibly COHN-S certified, leadership roles
Director or consultant (16+ years)
$100,000-$125,000+
Director roles, consulting, multi-site management
Salary by Industry/Employer Type
Industry
Average Salary
Work Environment
Technology Companies (Google, Microsoft, etc.)
$95,000-$120,000
Corporate campuses, excellent benefits
Aerospace/Aviation
$90,000-$110,000
Boeing, Lockheed Martin, airlines
Pharmaceutical/Biotech
$88,000-$105,000
Lab and office environments
Manufacturing - Large Corporations
$82,000-$98,000
Automotive, industrial equipment
Oil/Gas/Energy
$85,000-$105,000
Refineries, energy production facilities
Healthcare Systems (Employee Health)
$75,000-$90,000
Hospital employee health departments
Government - Federal
$80,000-$100,000
OSHA, military, federal agencies; pension benefits
Government - State/Local
$72,000-$88,000
Lower pay but pension and job security
Construction Companies
$75,000-$92,000
On-site at construction projects
Manufacturing - Small/Medium Companies
$70,000-$85,000
Smaller operations, varied responsibilities
Consulting Firms
$85,000-$120,000+
Experienced OHNs, project-based, variable
Source: Glassdoor industry salary data, January 2026 · Top named employers include Southern California Edison, Nike, and Bristol Myers Squibb
Salary by Geographic Location
Region/State
Average Salary
Notes
California
$105,000–$131,000
Highest salaries, very high cost of living
New York
$95,000-$112,000
Urban areas higher (NYC metro)
Massachusetts
$108,000–$115,000
Strong healthcare and biotech sectors
Washington
$105,000–$112,000
Seattle area tech companies
New Jersey
$88,000-$102,000
Pharmaceutical industry presence
Texas
$80,000-$95,000
Lower cost of living, energy sector
Illinois
$82,000-$95,000
Chicago area manufacturing and corporate
Pennsylvania
$78,000-$92,000
Manufacturing and healthcare
Midwest (OH, MI, IN, WI)
$75,000-$88,000
Manufacturing-heavy, moderate cost of living
South (AL, MS, AR, SC)
$68,000-$82,000
Lower salaries but lower cost of living
Source: BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2024 — bls.gov/oes
Additional Compensation and Benefits
Benefits Package:
Corporate positions often offer superior benefits including generous PTO (3-4+ weeks annually), retirement matching (6-10% of salary), stock options/equity (technology companies), tuition reimbursement ($5,000-$10,000 annually), professional development funding, and comprehensive health insurance.
Certification Bonus:
COHN or COHN-S certification may increase salary $2,000-$5,000 annually and improve competitive advantage for positions.
Shift Differentials (24/7 Operations):
OHNs in industrial settings with shift coverage may receive differentials – evening shift ($2-$4/hour), night shift ($4-$6/hour), weekend premium.
On-Call Pay:
Rare in occupational health but some positions pay on-call stipends ($100-$300 per on-call period).
Bonuses:
Some corporate positions include annual performance bonuses (5-15% of salary).
Job Outlook and Employment Projections
Overall Nursing Growth: 6% for RNs (2022-2032), faster than average for all occupations.
Occupational Health Nursing Demand Factors:
Regulatory Compliance Requirements: OSHA and other regulatory agencies require health surveillance programs in many industries, ensuring continued demand for OHNs managing compliance.
Aging Workforce: As employees work longer before retirement, managing chronic diseases and accommodating physical limitations becomes more important, increasing need for workplace health services.
Healthcare Cost Containment: Employers increasingly recognize that on-site occupational health services reduce healthcare costs by preventing injuries, managing chronic conditions, and decreasing emergency department visits.
Workplace Wellness Trends: Growing corporate focus on employee wellness, mental health, and work-life balance drives expansion of occupational health programs and OHN positions.
Manufacturing and Industrial Growth: As U.S. manufacturing experiences some resurgence and infrastructure investment increases, demand for OHNs in these sectors grows.
Limitations:
- Some companies outsource occupational health services rather than employing OHNs directly
- Automation and remote work may reduce on-site workforce at some companies
- Economic downturns can lead to elimination of OHN positions
Geographic Demand: Strongest in areas with manufacturing, technology, healthcare, and government employment. Rural areas may have limited opportunities compared to urban/suburban regions.
What’s Next?
How to Become an Occupational Health Nurse
This section outlines education requirements, licensure, certification, and experience needed to become a CNS.
Educational Pathway Timeline
Total Time:
4-7 years (RN preparation + clinical experience)
To become an OHN, first, RN preparation and clinical experience you need before any employer will consider you for an OHN role. You cannot come straight from nursing school, and understanding why that matters will save you from a frustrating job search later.
Step 1
Earn Your RN Licence (2–4 years)
Complete an ADN or BSN from an accredited nursing program, then pass the NCLEX-RN. Most OHN employers prefer a BSN; some corporate and pharmaceutical positions now list it as a requirement rather than a preference.
If you already have a degree in another field, an accelerated BSN takes 12–18 months. That is the fastest legitimate path into nursing if you are career-changing into this specialty from outside healthcare.
Cost range: ADN $10,000–$30,000 at community colleges. BSN $40,000–$100,000+ at universities.
Step 2
Pass NCLEX-RN Examination
Computer-adaptive exam, 75–145 questions. First-time pass rates for US-educated candidates run approximately 85–90%. Once you pass, you are a licensed registered nurse and can begin practising.
Step 3
Build Real Bedside Experience (2–5 years) Non-Negotiable
This is the step most people underestimate. OHNs regularly work as the only healthcare provider in a building, no charge nurse down the hall, no colleague to check a decision with. The clinical judgment you need for that cannot be taught in an OHN orientation. It has to be earned at the bedside first.
Emergency department nursing is the strongest preparation. The rapid assessment, autonomous decision-making, and emergency response skills transfer almost directly to occupational health practice. Medical-surgical and critical care backgrounds work well, too. Community and public health experience is useful for the wellness program side of the role.
What employers are actually looking for: a nurse who can assess a complex situation independently, decide whether it needs emergency transport or on-site management, and document everything correctly for OSHA without calling anyone for backup.
Minimum expectation: 2–3 years. Five years makes you highly competitive for any OHN position, including solo industrial roles.
Step 4
Find Your First OHN Position
Hospital employee health departments are the most accessible entry point.
They hire experienced RNs and provide structured OHN orientation, so you are not thrown in alone from day one. Larger corporations do the same.
Practical strategies that actually work:
- Join the American Association of Occupational Health Nurses (AAOHN) — their job board lists positions before they go public, and their member network is how most OHNs find their first role
- Target employee health departments at hospital systems in your area first — familiarity with the healthcare environment makes the transition smoother
- Consider temporary or contract OHN positions to accumulate hours toward certification eligibility
- Look at the OSHA Graduate Nurse Internship Program — an eight-week federal placement in OSHA’s Office of Occupational Medicine and Nursing in Washington, D.C. Competitive, but a strong credential for government or corporate OHN roles. Details at osha.gov/nursing
Entry-level position titles to search for: Employee Health Nurse, Corporate Health Services Nurse, Occupational Health Nurse (with mentorship), Case Manager, Occupational Health.
Step 5
Pursue COHN or COHN-S Certification (Strongly Recommended)
Certification is not legally required to practise. But the data make a clear case for pursuing it.
COHN — Certified Occupational Health Nurse Designed for nurses in direct clinical OHN practice.
- Education required: ADN or higher
- Experience required: 3,000 hours of OHN practice in the past 5 years
- Exam: 160 questions, 3 hours, computer-based
- Cost: $400–$500
- Salary impact: +$2,000–$5,000 annually
- Source: ABOHN.org, verified April 2026
COHN-S — Certified Occupational Health Nurse Specialist Designed for nurses in administration, programme management, consulting, or education.
- Education required: Bachelor’s degree or higher (does not have to be in nursing)
- Experience required: 3,000 hours of OHN practice in the past 5 years
- Exam: 160 questions, 3 hours, computer-based
- Cost: $400–$500
- Salary impact: +$5,000–$8,000 annually
- Source: ABOHN.org, verified April 2026
ABOHN is explicit on one point: choose based on your actual practice role, not your education level. A BSN nurse doing hands-on clinical OHN work should sit for the COHN. Getting that wrong means studying the wrong content blueprint entirely.
ABOHN also offers a Case Management (CM) credential for OHNs who already hold COHN or COHN-S and want to specialise in workers’ compensation and disability management.
Most nurses accumulate the required 3,000 hours over two to three years in the specialty before certification becomes available to them. Plan for it from day one, use that time to study the ABOHN exam content outline alongside your daily practice.
Certification renewal: Every 5 years, 50 continuing nursing education hours related to occupational health, plus 3,000 OHN practice hours in the past 5 years. Source: ABOHN renewal requirements.
Additional Training Worth Pursuing
For nurses aiming at leadership or consulting roles:
- MSN in Occupational Health Nursing, Public Health (MPH), or Nursing Administration qualifies you for Director-level positions, adding $15,000–$30,000 to your salary
- Ergonomics certification (Certified Professional Ergonomist — CPE)
- Case Management certification (CCM)
- OSHA 30-hour or 500-hour certification
- DOT Medical Examiner Certification for positions requiring DOT physicals
RN licence renewal: State-specific, typically 15–30 contact hours every 2 years. Check your state board requirements directly.
What’s Next?
Career Path and Advancement
Understand advancement opportunities and long-term growth potential.
Career Progression Timeline
Years 1-3
New Occupational Health Nurse
$70,000-$80,000.
Transition into occupational health specialty, building OHN-specific skills. May work in employee health department or corporate setting with mentorship. Learn OSHA regulations, workers’ compensation systems, case management. Focus on gaining confidence in autonomous practice.
Years 4-7
Experienced OHN
$82,000-$95,000.
Confident in OHN practice. Developing or managing workplace health programs independently. Possibly pursuing COHN certification. May serve as resource for other healthcare staff.
Years 8-15
Senior OHN
$92,000-$108,000.
Expert practitioner, likely COHN or COHN-S certified. Leading complex programs, mentoring newer OHNs, participating in strategic planning for workplace health. May manage multiple worksites or oversee OHN teams.
Advanced Roles
$110,000–$165,000+
Director-level positions, consulting, or specialized expertise.
Leadership and Management Advancement
Lead Occupational Health Nurse:
Coordinate team of OHNs at large facilities or multi-site operations. Oversee schedules, serve as clinical resource, ensure consistency across sites. Requires strong clinical and leadership skills. Salary: $95,000-$110,000.
Manager/Director of Occupational Health Services:
Manage entire occupational health program for corporation or large facility. Oversee OHN staff, develop strategic plans, manage budgets, report outcomes to senior leadership, ensure regulatory compliance. Requires master’s degree often. Salary: $110,000-$140,000.
Corporate Health & Wellness Director:
Broader role overseeing all employee health programs including occupational health, wellness, mental health resources, employee assistance programs. Strategic leadership position. Salary: $120,000-$165,000+.
Regional or Multi-Site OHN Leader:
Manage occupational health services across multiple locations for large corporations or consulting firms. Travel required. Salary: $105,000-$135,000.
Consulting and Specialized Paths
Occupational Health Consultant:
Experienced OHNs establish consulting practices helping companies develop occupational health programs, conduct assessments, provide temporary coverage, or offer specialized expertise. Income variable: $90-$200/hour or project-based fees.
Case Management Specialist:
Focus on workers’ compensation case management and disability management. Work for insurance companies, third-party administrators, or employers. Salary: $80,000-$105,000.
Ergonomics Specialist:
Specialize in ergonomic assessments and interventions. Pursue Certified Professional Ergonomist (CPE) credential. Work as consultant or within large organizations. Salary: $90,000-$120,000.
OSHA Compliance Specialist:
Focus on regulatory compliance, OSHA reporting, preparing for inspections. Highly specialized knowledge. Salary: $85,000-$110,000.
Academic and Training Roles
Occupational Health Nurse Educator:
Teach in nursing programs or provide corporate training. Develop occupational health nursing courses or continuing education programs. Salary: $80,000-$110,000.
Clinical Preceptor:
Mentor new OHNs or nursing students. Usually part of regular OHN role but may receive stipends.
Alternative Career Transitions
Safety Manager/Director:
Some OHNs transition fully into safety leadership roles (not nursing-specific). Requires safety certifications. Salary: $90,000-$130,000.
Employee Benefits/HR Leadership:
Leverage healthcare knowledge in human resources roles managing employee benefits, disability, leave. Salary: $85,000-$120,000.
Can I Return to Bedside Nursing after OHN?
Yes, you can return to bedside nursing after working in occupational health. The clinical skills you build as an OHN do not disappear.
Autonomous assessment, emergency response, chronic disease management develop differently in an occupational health setting but they remain transferable.
One nurse who made the switch put it plainly in an online nursing community: “You’ll always be able to get into any nursing field no matter what path you choose. I don’t believe in the idea that once you lose some skills you’re dead ending your career. I learned those skills as a new grad with zero experience, so I can certainly learn them again.”
A deliberate refresher plan and, in some cases, a short bridging contract is enough to transition back. Nurses with OHN experience and COHN certification are strong candidates across clinical settings the autonomous judgment and emergency preparedness you build in occupational health is valued, not dismissed.
Leave all other Career Progression content: Lead OHN, Director, Consulting, Ergonomics Specialist, OSHA Compliance Specialist, and Academic roles completely unchanged.
What’s Next?
Skills and Personality Traits
In the next section, you’ll discover the clinical, leadership, communication, and analytical skills that top OHN professionals rely on every day.
Essential Skills for Occupational Health Nurses
Clinical Competencies:
Broad Clinical Knowledge Base
OHNs need general medical knowledge across many areas: emergency care (cardiac events, trauma, anaphylaxis), chronic disease management (diabetes, hypertension, asthma), minor illness and injury treatment, medication knowledge, and health assessment skills. Unlike specialized hospital units, OHNs see everything.
Autonomous Clinical Judgment
Making sound decisions independently without immediate physician or colleague backup. Determining when employees need emergency transport vs. clinic follow-up vs. self-care. Assessing injury severity and appropriate treatment level.
Case Management Skills
Coordinating workers’ compensation cases, communicating with multiple stakeholders (employees, employers, insurance, healthcare providers), tracking cases to resolution, and ensuring appropriate care while managing costs.
Health Education and Counseling
Teaching individuals and groups about health topics. Motivating behavior change. Tailoring education to diverse literacy levels and learning styles.
Regulatory Knowledge
Understanding OSHA regulations, workers’ compensation laws, ADA requirements, HIPAA privacy rules, and DOT medical certification (if applicable). Maintaining required documentation and compliance.
Program Development and Management
Designing health surveillance programs, wellness initiatives, and safety programs. Planning, implementing, evaluating effectiveness, and modifying based on data.
Ergonomic Assessment
Analyzing workstations and work processes for injury risk. Recommending modifications. Understanding body mechanics and repetitive strain injuries.
Data Analysis and Reporting
Tracking injury rates, analyzing trends, presenting findings to management. Using data to justify programs and demonstrate value.
Personality Characteristics
Independence and Self-Direction:
Comfort working alone without colleague support. Self-motivated to manage time, prioritize tasks, and solve problems independently.
Business Acumen:
Understanding corporate environments, business priorities, cost considerations. Communicating healthcare concepts in business terms (ROI, cost savings, productivity).
Diplomacy and Political Savvy:
Navigating relationships between employees and management. Advocating for worker health while respecting business constraints. Managing conflicting interests diplomatically.
Adaptability and Flexibility:
Handling diverse situations daily – medical emergencies, employee counseling, program planning, regulatory compliance. Switching between different types of work seamlessly.
Strong Communication Skills:
Communicating effectively with all organizational levels – frontline workers, managers, executives. Writing clearly for documentation, reports, and policies.
Proactive Problem-Solver:
Identifying problems before they escalate. Developing preventive solutions. Continuous improvement mindset.
Detail-Oriented:
Maintaining accurate records, ensuring regulatory compliance, tracking cases thoroughly. Small documentation errors can have significant consequences.
Confidentiality and Ethics:
Maintaining employee health information confidentiality. Balancing employee advocacy with employer obligations. Managing ethical dilemmas with integrity.
Cultural Competency:
Working with diverse employee populations. Respecting varied cultural beliefs about health, work, and authority. Providing inclusive care.
What’s Next?
Similar and Related Careers
If you’re exploring multiple paths in advanced nursing, this section introduces roles similar to a OHN, helping you compare responsibilities, education, and career focus.
Alternative Healthcare Careers to Consider
If occupational health nursing interests you but concerns exist about specific aspects, consider related careers:
Case Manager (Clinical)
Education: RN with experience; certification preferred
Median Salary: $75,000-$95,000
Coordinate patient care across settings, manage complex cases, work with insurance companies. Many work Monday-Friday but for hospitals or insurance companies rather than corporations. Similar utilization review and care coordination skills without workplace injury focus.
Public Health Nurse
Education: BSN typically; BSN + MPH preferred
Median Salary: $70,000-$85,000
Work for health departments providing community health services, disease prevention, and health education. Population health focus similar to occupational health but serving communities rather than workplaces. Often Monday-Friday schedules.
School Nurse
Education: BSN typically; school nurse certification
Median Salary: $60,000-$75,000
Provide health services to students and staff. Similar autonomy and Monday-Friday schedule. Summers off (though often unpaid). Lower salary than occupational health but excellent work-life balance.
Nurse Practitioner - Occupational Health
Education: MSN or DNP (6-8 years total)
Median Salary: $110,000-$125,000
Advanced practice role in occupational health with prescriptive authority and expanded scope. Manage complex cases independently, conduct physicals, diagnose and treat conditions. Higher salary and autonomy than RN-level OHN.
Clinic Nurse/Ambulatory Care Nurse
Education: ADN or BSN
Median Salary: $70,000-$82,000
Work in outpatient clinics providing care during regular business hours. Similar schedule benefits to occupational health but in traditional healthcare setting rather than corporate environment.
Utilization Review Nurse
Education: RN with acute care experience
Median Salary: $78,000-$92,000
Review medical cases for insurance companies or hospitals determining medical necessity and appropriate care level. Remote work often possible. Monday-Friday schedule, analytical work.Independent consulting helping healthcare organizations or nursing programs with education initiatives, accreditation, or curriculum development.
Workers' Compensation Nurse (Insurance)
Education: RN with case management experience
Median Salary: $75,000-$95,000
Work for insurance carriers managing workers’ compensation claims, reviewing medical records, coordinating care. Similar to OHN work but from insurance perspective rather than employer side.
Safety Specialist/Coordinator
Education: Various; safety certifications
Median Salary: $70,000-$90,000
Focus on workplace safety rather than health. Conduct safety training, inspect worksites, investigate incidents. Can transition from nursing background. Less clinical, more regulatory/safety focused.
What’s Next?
Frequently Asked Questions
Still have questions? The final section addresses common concerns and practical questions about becoming and working as a OHN.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much experience do I need before becoming an occupational health nurse?
Two to three years is the floor, and more is genuinely better. OHNs regularly work as the only healthcare provider on site, making independent clinical calls without anyone nearby to check them with.
Emergency backgrounds translate particularly well because the rapid assessment and autonomous decision-making transfer almost directly.
Some employee health departments at hospitals will hire experienced RNs with no prior OHN background and train them from scratch, but solo industrial positions almost always want three or more years of bedside experience first.
Do occupational health nurses work nights and weekends?
Rarely. The standard setup is Monday to Friday, roughly 8 am to 5 pm, matching whatever hours the company runs.
Some industrial operations that never shut down do have OHNs on rotating shifts, but even then, it is scheduled in advance, not the last-minute roster changes that come with hospital nursing.
Being on-call is uncommon. A lot of nurses who make the move say the schedule alone changed their quality of life more than anything else
Is occupational health nursing boring compared to hospital nursing?
Different, not boring. The pace is slower than in a hospital, there is no question about that. But the work is genuinely varied: one morning you are assessing a forklift injury, the afternoon you are presenting a wellness programme to an engineering team, and then you are coordinating a workers’ compensation case with HR, legal, and an external physician.
What changes is the nature of the intensity, not the absence of it. Nurses who struggle with isolation, being the only clinician in the building, find it harder than nurses who enjoy working independently.
Can I work part-time as an occupational health nurse?
It depends on the setting. Part-time OHN roles exist particularly in consulting, employee health departments at smaller companies, and corporate wellness programmes.
Solo-practitioner industrial positions are almost always full-time because coverage requirements are tied to shift operations. If part-time is a priority, target hospital employee health departments or multi-nurse corporate clinics where coverage can be shared across a team.
Do I need certification to be an occupational health nurse?
Not legally required, an active RN licence is sufficient to practise. That said, COHN certification through ABOHN adds $2,000–$5,000 annually, and COHN-S adds $5,000–$8,000, and both meaningfully improve your position when competing for corporate roles.
Most nurses cannot sit the exam until they have built up 3,000 OHN hours anyway, around two to three years in the specialty, so there is time to prepare while gaining experience.
What is the difference between occupational health nurse and employee health nurse?
They are essentially the same role with different naming conventions depending on the employer.
‘Occupational health nurse’ is the broader industry term used by AAOHN and ABOHN. ‘Employee health nurse’ is the term most commonly used inside hospital systems for nurses managing staff health, immunisations, occupational exposures, and return-to-work coordination for hospital employees.
The scope overlaps almost completely. The practical difference is setting: OHN typically refers to corporate and industrial environments, while employee health nurse typically refers to healthcare system settings.
What’s Next?
Overview
The overview brings together key highlights, role impact, and career context—making it a helpful starting point whether you’re just beginning or refining your decision.