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Free Bloodborne Pathogen Certification

Free Bloodborne Pathogen Certificate

Complete your OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen (29 CFR 1910.1030) training online, pass the exam, and earn a verifiable certificate — free. Accepted by employers, shareable on LinkedIn, and backed by KnowQo's secure certificate ledger. No cost, no credit card, no expiration.

Free forever — no credit card Exam included Verifiable certificate

Bloodborne Pathogen Certificate that is...

Verifiable

Your Bloodborne Pathogen training certificate is stored on KnowQo's secure certificate ledger with a unique fingerprint. KnowQo certificates are perfect to share with employers, recruiters, or your LinkedIn community because they are universally verifiable.

LinkedIn Connected

In one click, you can publish your Bloodborne Pathogen certificate to LinkedIn. Demonstrate your OSHA competence and stand out to healthcare recruiters with a credential they can verify instantly.

Downloadable

Download your Bloodborne Pathogen certificate in one click. Email it to a recruiter, attach it to a job application, or keep it on file to show your employer at your next annual review.

Free. No hidden fees.

The training is free. The exam is free. The certificate is free. There is no paid tier, no upgrade required, and no credit card needed. KnowQo Health is a free learning community: not a free trial.

BBP Training that teaches...

1 Why It Matters
2 Pathogens & Transmission
3 Exposure Control
4 After an Exposure
Final Exam
1Why It Matters

What Are Bloodborne Pathogens?

Bloodborne pathogens are infectious microorganisms present in human blood that can cause disease in humans. (source) Breaking It Down Bloodborne: carried in the blood Pathogens: organisms that cause disease (viruses, bacteria, parasites) When infected blood or bodily fluids enter your body, these microorganisms can infect you and make you sick.

Who Must Be Trained

Who's at Risk? If your job involves contact with blood or bodily fluids, you're at risk for bloodborne pathogen exposure. Healthcare Workers The most common at-risk occupations: 👩‍⚕️ Nurses — sustain the greatest number of needlestick injuries 🧑‍⚕️ Doctors and surgeons 🦷 Dental professionals 🔬 Lab technicians 🧹 Housekeeping staff — in healthcare facilities First Responders 🚑 EMTs and paramedics 🚒 Firefighters 👮 Law enforcement officers First responders face unique risks due to uncontrolled settings and the possible presence of large volumes of blood at the scene. (source) Other At-Risk Workers You might not expect these, but they're covered too: 🏠 Home health aides and personal care aides 👶 Childcare workers 🔧 Plumbers and maintenance workers — who may encounter blood or bodily fluids 💉 Staff supporting IV drug users (source) The Bottom Line If you have "reasonably anticipated exposure" to blood or bodily fluids at work, the BBP Standard protects you — and your employer must comply.

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This is just a sample of our curriculum, please join KnowQo to get the entire Bloodborne Pathogen Training curriculum.

2Pathogens & Transmission

HIV

How You Get HIV HIV spreads through contact with infected blood or bodily fluids. A needlestick, cut from a sharp, or splash to your eyes, nose, or mouth can transmit HIV from an infected patient to you. What HIV Does Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) is a bloodborne pathogen that attacks the immune system (source). If untreated, HIV can lead to AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome), leaving the body vulnerable to life-threatening infections and cancers (source). Treatments and Cures There is no vaccine or cure for HIV (source). However, post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) can prevent infection if administered within 72 hours of exposure. If you think you've been exposed, seek medical attention immediately — time matters. Read more Symptoms HIV often has no visible symptoms for years. When early symptoms do appear — typically 2 to 4 weeks after infection — they can resemble the flu and then disappear. This doesn't mean the virus is gone. Without treatment, HIV progresses through stages over time, eventually leading to AIDS. The only way to know if you have HIV is to get tested. (source)

Hepatitis B (HBV)

How You Get HBV HBV spreads through contact with infected blood or bodily fluids. A needlestick, cut from a sharp, or splash to your eyes, nose, or mouth can transmit HBV from an infected patient to you. What HBV Does Hepatitis B (HBV) is a bloodborne pathogen that attacks the liver (source). HBV can cause chronic infection, liver scarring (cirrhosis), liver failure, and liver cancer (source) Treatments and Cures A vaccine is available to protect against HBV infection (source). Your employer is required by law to offer it to you during work hours, free of charge. There is no cure to HBV, the virus stays with you for life. Read more Symptoms Many people with HBV don't feel sick. When symptoms do appear, they can include: yellow skin or eyes (jaundice), dark urine or clay-colored stools, fatigue, fever, joint pain, loss of appetite, nausea, stomach pain, or vomiting. The only way to know if you have HBV is to get tested. (source)

Hepatitis C (HCV)

How You Get HCV HCV spreads through contact with infected blood or bodily fluids. A needlestick, cut from a sharp, or splash to your eyes, nose, or mouth can transmit HCV from an infected patient to you. What HCV Does Hepatitis C (HCV) is a bloodborne pathogen that attacks the liver (source). HCV often becomes a chronic infection and can lead to liver damage, cirrhosis, and liver cancer (source). Treatments and Cures There is no vaccine for HCV, but treatment is available (source). If you are exposed, testing and clinical management can help detect and treat infection early. Recently, HCV is now considered "curable" with 95% of patients cured in 8-12 weeks. Read more Symptoms Many people with HCV don't look or feel sick — symptoms can take decades to develop. When symptoms do appear, they can include: yellow skin or eyes (jaundice), dark urine or clay-colored stools, fatigue, fever, joint pain, loss of appetite, nausea, stomach pain, or vomiting. The only way to know if you have HCV is to get tested. (source)

Join KnowQo to Learn More

This is just a sample of our curriculum, please join KnowQo to get the entire Bloodborne Pathogen Training curriculum.

3Exposure Control

The Exposure Control Plan

What Is an Exposure Control Plan? An Exposure Control Plan is a written document your employer must create that explains exactly how they will protect you from bloodborne pathogens at work. (source) It's Not Optional OSHA requires every employer with workers who have occupational exposure to implement an Exposure Control Plan. This isn't a suggestion — it's federal law. What the Plan Must Include Your employer's Exposure Control Plan must describe how they will provide: 🛠️ Engineering Controls — safer equipment and devices that isolate or remove the hazard 📋 Work Practice Controls — procedures and behaviors that reduce exposure risk 😷 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) — gloves, gowns, masks, and eye protection 📚 Employee Training — annual training on BBP hazards and protection 🩺 Medical Surveillance — monitoring and follow-up after exposures 💉 Hepatitis B Vaccination — offered free, during work hours (you may decline, but your employer must document it) 📝 Other Provisions — everything else required by OSHA's BBP Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030)

Engineering Controls

Why Engineering Controls Come First Engineering controls are the primary means of eliminating or minimizing employee exposure. (source) Why? Because they don't rely on you remembering to do something — the safety is built in. Your Employer's Obligation If an effective and clinically appropriate engineering control exists, your employer must evaluate and implement it. This isn't optional. (source) Examples of Engineering Controls 🚫 Needleless devices — eliminate the needle entirely 🛡️ Shielded needle devices — cover the needle after use 🧪 Plastic capillary tubes — replace breakable glass 🪡 Blunt suture needles — pierce tissue, not your gloves 🧰 Sharps containers — safe disposal that prevents sticks 🧼 Decontamination equipment — disinfectants and sterilants The Bottom Line The best way to prevent exposure is to engineer the hazard out. Safer devices = fewer injuries. The CDC estimates that 62 to 88 percent of sharps injuries can be prevented simply by using safer medical devices. (source)

Join KnowQo to Learn More

This is just a sample of our curriculum, please join KnowQo to get the entire Bloodborne Pathogen Training curriculum.

4After an Exposure

Immediate First Aid

If You're Exposed, Act Immediately The CDC states: Provide immediate care after exposure by taking the following steps. (source) Post-exposure management must be conducted by or under the supervision of a licensed physician or other licensed healthcare professional. Immediate Steps 🧼 Needlestick or cut — Wash with soap and water 💦 Splash to nose, mouth, or skin — Flush with water 👁️ Splash to eyes — Irrigate with clean water, saline, or sterile irrigants Then: 📋 Report the incident to your supervisor 🏥 Immediately seek medical care to determine risk associated with the exposure (source) Time Matters Post-exposure treatment is most effective when started as soon as possible — in some cases within hours. Don't wait.

Join KnowQo to Learn More

This is just a sample of our curriculum, please join KnowQo to get the entire Bloodborne Pathogen Training curriculum.

Frequently asked questions

Is BBP the same as Bloodborne Pathogen training?

Yes. BBP is simply the abbreviation for Bloodborne Pathogens. When employers, healthcare facilities, or OSHA documentation refer to 'BBP training,' 'BBP certification,' or a 'BBP certificate,' they mean Bloodborne Pathogen training — the same requirement governed by OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030). The terms are completely interchangeable.

Can I get my Bloodborne Pathogen certification for free?

Yes. KnowQo Health is a free learning community — not a free trial. The training is free, the exam is free, and the certificate is free. There is no paid tier, no upgrade required, and no credit card needed. Our learners never pay a cent. This works because we have a large suite of healthcare compliance tools that we sell to healthcare organizations, allowing us to keep Bloodborne Pathogen training free for individuals.

Who needs Bloodborne Pathogen training?

OSHA's 29 CFR 1910.1030 standard requires Bloodborne Pathogen training for any worker with reasonably anticipated occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials. This includes nurses, physicians, lab technicians, phlebotomists, dental staff, EMTs, home health aides, tattoo artists, body piercers, school nurses, and correctional facility workers. If your job could put you in contact with blood, you need it.

How do I get a Bloodborne Pathogen certificate?

Sign up for a free KnowQo Health account, complete the four Bloodborne Pathogen training modules, and pass the final exam. Once you pass, your certificate is issued automatically and added to the KnowQo certificate ledger. The whole process typically takes less than two hours.

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How long does Bloodborne Pathogen training take?

Most learners complete the KnowQo Bloodborne Pathogen certification in one to two hours. The program is broken into four short modules followed by a final exam. You can work through it at your own pace: start, pause, and resume whenever it fits your schedule.

Does a Bloodborne Pathogen certificate expire?

Yes. OSHA requires employers to provide Bloodborne Pathogen training at initial assignment and then annually thereafter. This means your certificate should be renewed every year to remain compliant. KnowQo certificates display the date of issue so both you and your employer can track when retraining is due.

Is Bloodborne Pathogen training mandatory?

Yes. OSHA's Bloodborne Pathogens Standard (29 CFR 1910.1030) requires annual training for workers with reasonably anticipated occupational exposure to blood or other potentially infectious materials. Employers who fail to provide it face OSHA citations and penalties. Individual workers in regulated industries often cannot start work without documented Bloodborne Pathogen training.

Is Bloodborne Pathogen certification hard to get?

No. KnowQo's Bloodborne Pathogen certification is designed to be accessible to anyone working in or near healthcare. The training includes video (with closed captions), reading (with text-to-speech support), and quiz questions designed to suit a wide range of learning styles. The exam tests practical understanding rather than memorization, and you can retake it as many times as you need.

How many questions are on the Bloodborne Pathogen exam?

The KnowQo Bloodborne Pathogen final exam has 12 questions and you have 1 hour to complete it. Most learners finish in 10 to 15 minutes. The exam covers the key concepts from all four modules — OSHA requirements, major bloodborne pathogens, exposure control methods, and post-exposure procedures.

Can I get Bloodborne Pathogen certified online?

Yes. KnowQo is fully online. You can complete your Bloodborne Pathogen training, take the exam, and receive your verifiable certificate entirely from your computer or phone. No software to install, no in-person session required.

Is a Bloodborne Pathogen certificate worth it?

Yes, especially if you work in healthcare, emergency services, dental, laboratory, or any hands-on setting. Many employers require proof of annual Bloodborne Pathogen training before hire or as a condition of continued employment. On KnowQo it costs nothing, so there's no reason to delay. Most importantly, BBP training keeps you safe and at KnowQo we firmly believe that there is truly nothing more valuable than your safety.